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 --- A GOPHER-LIKE INTERFACE FOR HIVE BLOCKCHAIN ---

Proposal to make spam less profitable

BY: @timcliff | CREATED: April 15, 2018, 7:44 p.m. | VOTES: 190 | PAYOUT: $121.77 | [ VOTE ]

[IMAGE: https://steemitimages.com/DQmaxEPJzsqauGDnzrHfE2dnFtNpL8TADPA4hXyWzpsvJ6V/image.png]

There is little cost to adding spam to the blockchain. Accounts are given a limited amount of bandwidth to use, but as long as they stay within those limits - they can create as many posts and comments as they want for free. What users do with those posts and comments is entirely up to them. Some use them to create content that adds value to the network. Others post spam that does nothing more than annoy users and add garbage to the permanent storage of the blockchain.

One thing that I think increases the amount of spam is the fact that there is a small chance of earning rewards - even if the posts/comments suck. If a user posts 10,000 "nice post" comments in a month, and 10% of them earn a few pennies worth of rewards - then that is still a profitable business model.

One change that I think would help address this is to increase the amount of rewards a post/comment must reach before it gets a non-zero payout. Currently if a post/comment earns 0.001 to 0.019 SBD worth of rewards - this is rounded down to 0.00. If a post/comment earns at least 0.02 SBD - then they receive their reward.

If we increased this threshold up to 0.10 SBD, or even 0.25 or 1.00 SBD - then posts/comments that did not receive sufficient votes to pass this threshold would receive zero payout. This would likely decrease the incentive for users to create spam.

Technical Details

For those of you who aren't interested in the technical details, feel free to skip this section. It gets a little nerdy :)

Here is the section of code that is currently checking the "dust threshold" (0.02 SBD). If posts/comments do not reach this threshold, the payout is rounded down to zero.
https://github.com/steemit/steem/blob/master/libraries/chain/util/reward.cpp
[IMAGE: https://steemitimages.com/DQmf2tDV7BPzru6Rp3fCHsmNUwN86HaZnfqs1TYj4AvvPQk/image.png]

This is the definition of the function, where it does the computation:
https://github.com/steemit/steem/blob/master/libraries/chain/include/steem/chain/util/reward.hpp
[IMAGE: https://steemitimages.com/DQmeKuyoUrBHQ6SxuUex8m2P9QfXydva94QMXB1S7e3prvb/image.png]

Here is where the threshold is set to 0.020 SBD:
https://github.com/steemit/steem/blob/master/libraries/protocol/include/steem/protocol/config.hpp
[IMAGE: https://steemitimages.com/DQmd1fJzwe4pwZ9JoYERAcLadFNQVg4cyUQFowErVPb63id/image.png]

Feedback Requested

What do people think of this change?
- Do you think it will help with spam?
- What do you think the 'right' threshold should be?
- What are the potential negative consequences?
- Do the "pros" outweigh the "cons"?
- What other suggestions are there?

Note: There are currently no plans to implement this. I am just proposing it to see what people's thoughts are. If it seems like there is a lot of support for it, then further discussion on whether it should be included in a future hardfork would be needed. (So far, it is just an idea.)

TAGS: [ #steem ] [ #steemdev ] [ #witness-category ] [ #rewards ] [ #spam ]

Replies

@jcobs | April 15, 2018, 7:47 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

What this proposal does in basics, is making non-profitable to engage into spam activities by make a system to be less profitable to upvote the same person all the time.

This will force eventual spammer into a direction of finding what to curate of a different person, with limited 'amount of tries' before it becomes unprofitable to perform it at random.

@timcliff | April 15, 2018, 7:55 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

The proposal does not include anything that deals with which accounts vote for which accounts. It is entirely based on the amount of rshares (votes measured in SP) that the post/comment receives.

@whatsup | April 15, 2018, 7:47 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

It is an interesting idea, and I am interested in seeing the comments and discussion.

I am for considering it and reading the rest of the feedback.

@sircork | April 15, 2018, 7:48 p.m. | Votes: 3 | [ VOTE ]

Still a symptom. When we know how dart can make (crowd source?) thousands of new accounts per day, (command line?) which are attributed to standard steem upstream registrations, when a regular user takes weeks to months to never to get registered, we can intervene on bot signups before they take root, which will probably otherwise in this scenario, just increase the size of their rings to meet the new dust threshold. maybe

@timcliff | April 15, 2018, 7:53 p.m. | Votes: 3 | [ VOTE ]

There are still issues with the signup process, yes. I am open to discussing those, but they are not the root problem of spam.

Regarding signups, Steemit continues to make improvements to their signup system. If you look at the faucet repository (the one that handles signups) it is one of their busiest repositories right now.

If there are accounts that have abused the signup process, and are abusing the system with delegations they received via the faucet, someone should provide that information to @andrarchy at Steemit so they can remove the delegations.

> dart can make (crowd source?) thousands of new accounts per day, (command line?) which are attributed to standard steem upstream registrations, when a regular user takes weeks to months to never to get registered

This is skewed perception. The "dart" users have to go through the same signup process as all the other users. They are not fast-tracked. They have the same wait as everyone else. Yes, some are probably slipping through - but it is not like they are getting special approvals. They are just finding ways to get through Steemit's current review process.

Also, most legitimate users are approved in a matter of days, or possibly up to a week. The number of legitimate users that are taking more than a week at this point is really really low. (I know this because drakos and I are the main people that deal with these users.)

@steevc | April 15, 2018, 7:59 p.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

I would hope Steemit can at least spot new accounts that just differ by a number. That should be trivial to check. Streamlining sign-up has to be a priority, but it's not easy to deal with abuse.

@sircork | April 15, 2018, 8:02 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

@patrice hammers this point in Trash Talk, her tuesday evening show on the SteemStar Network.

The proliferation of spam accounts named such as:
abc123
abc1234
abc12345

or

Abcd1
abcd2
etc

Are pretty obvious and have recovery accounts pointing at legitimate signups. If there is a manual process, it's got some very funky guidelines to let 1000 accounts in a row with that kind of naming convention slide on by.

Until that hole is plugged, raising the dust rate hurts venezuelans and other disadvantaged economies, while proliferating these automated / crowd sourced spam sign ups.

@timcliff | April 15, 2018, 8:04 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

My guess is that the username that a user chooses is not factored in to their identify verification process. I suppose it could be, but it would not be that hard for an attacker to then just randomize their account name choice, and then they would be back at 'square one'.

@sircork | April 15, 2018, 8:08 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Fair point on randomization.

So raising dust, only means they make more bots to meet it.
Chasing sequential usernames forces them to obscure them.
Wonder what the magical "manual verification" step is?

@timcliff | April 15, 2018, 8:17 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

There are separate discussions here. Signup abuse != spam. They are related, and there is overlap - but we cannot solve one problem 100% by just addressing the other.

If delegations are removed from abusive signups, then the damage done there is relatively minimal.

@patrice | April 15, 2018, 8:22 p.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

You're right. Remove the rewards and 99% stop their activities on an individual level. That would actually make identifying the multi-account abusers easier.

@sircork | April 15, 2018, 8:04 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

(While pluggin the hole would reduce the automated spam and In turn reducing load on the sign up process overall)

@patrice | April 15, 2018, 8:09 p.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

Ahh.. well. They figured we were on to them with the sequential numbers. They are mixing it up now. The biggest problem in identifying them is manpower.

Just today I found an account that was added to mack-bot that was a ramodom voter and not part of a group. These have to be manually checked. Even then I make mistakes so I spend a couple hours a day looking at those that respond to my comments or DM me. 99% of the time they are multi-account abusers but there is always human error.

@sircork | April 15, 2018, 8:11 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Well, damn.

Oh yes, good old gina-bot. @neander-squirrel. You done good. I love it when a mention results in an insta-reply.

@wizardave | April 15, 2018, 8:20 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

I have 2 friends who signed up on March 1st and still haven't gotten their final signup email.

@timcliff | April 15, 2018, 8:24 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Send them to the help channel of steem.chat.

@isnochys | April 16, 2018, 4:35 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Have a look here:
https://steemit.com/steem/@guiltyparties/account-creation-issues-solutions

@roselover | April 15, 2018, 7:49 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Spam has become a lot and tightens a lot of people
Your suggestion is very cool and I agree
Truly you are a wonderful and successful person and offer us the nicest information

@abdulmanan | April 15, 2018, 7:53 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

This could be done, but I do not agree with you on this.
You know it very well how difficult it is to get noticed on this platform.
even after creating good content.
and after creating content after hard work, they get 0.01 or 0.02, maybe sometimes 0.1, would it be good to create that threshold?
It will just hurt them, and they will leave this platform.
we know that nice post, nice comments are not working anymore!
Whales know well who to upvote and who not?
That's my views on this.

Rest I'm leaving to the community.
God bless you!

@howo | April 15, 2018, 7:53 p.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

Well sure but then you remove some incentive from minnows to participate because their vote is now useless in most of the cases

And this change means that you de-incentivize commenting and interacting with people

@timcliff | April 15, 2018, 7:57 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

It is not a useless vote though. Let's say we set the threshold to 0.10 SBD. If each user votes and adds 0.01 to the comment, and the comment gets 10 of these votes - then there will be a payout of 0.10.

@suesa | April 16, 2018, 5:02 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

This assumes people would be more willing to vote on comments after the change.
I've been upvoting comments under my posts almost since the day I joined, which means my initial votes were way below the threshold. It's not a problem anymore now, obviously, but the change would force me to use a lot more VP if I want to guarantee that a comment I appreciate gets anything for it. I rarely see more than 1 or 2 people upvoting a comment. If not at least one of the is a dolphin or voting with 100%, there will be no payout and people have wasted their VP.

I get where you're coming from with your proposal. But imo, it would accelerate the death of this platform. Spammers have to be dealt with (I flag them under my posts all the time), but not at the cost of hurting minnows.

@themarkymark | April 15, 2018, 7:53 p.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

Interesting idea. I think this will be a frustration point to new users who have very little voting power. Comment spam is insane right now so I think this might be a good patch for now.

Ultimately I think we need something that solves the problem and doesn’t just patch the symptoms.

I keep saying the #1 thing Steem needs is more spam prevention with stronger bite but it’s endless.

Something needs to be done though, it is getting worse by the day as more join the gravy train.

@timcliff | April 15, 2018, 7:57 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

> Ultimately I think we need something that solves the problem and doesn’t just patch the symptoms.

Thoughts on what this is?

@themarkymark | April 15, 2018, 8:07 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

I wish I knew. For the longest time I felt the solution was strong spam prevention like SteemCleaners with more man power and reward reversal with fewer strings attached to what they can deal with. Make it unprofitable and they will stop.

But there are so many people playing the game it’s a cat and mouse game in the end.

There are a few ideas that might help and likely won’t be just one solution.

  • dual voting pools so you can flag without sacrificing rewards
  • anonymous flagging
  • higher dust level for comments
  • community SteemCleaners like service

I still feel a big part of the solution is to make their efforts negative ROI which will discourage the practice. As a very active spam fighter, finding and identifying (importantly verifying) is extremely time consuming and unrewarding.

I very actively blacklist users so they cannot use my promotion services to reward their garbage but most of the stuff I find and identify I feel will never be dealt with.

@tarazkp | April 15, 2018, 8:30 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

@steemcleaners burn the accounts and the SBD/Steem they hold ;)

@fingersik | April 15, 2018, 7:55 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Wouldn’t that proposal harm minnows that are creating genuine content but don’t reach the sufficient threshold? Wouldn’t they deserve to get at least the few pennies so they can grow slowly but steadily? Most of the comments only end up being on those few pennies. For example when I want to reward activity on my blog by upvotes i do so with about 10%-30% which is about 0,04-0,12 bucks. That very well could be a limit that even spam comments manage to get.

Anyway i believe that it WOULD help with the spam. The more important question is, what harm it would do.

@tarazkp | April 15, 2018, 8:35 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Just throwing ideas... What if it was 'payment withheld' for the first few months like a trial period until someone passes muster (doesn't get flagged all the time as Spam).

@fingersik | April 15, 2018, 8:45 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Now that is a REALLY good idea! Yes that would solve the problem I outlined. The only problem left would be: How to set the right threshold in order for the minnows not to get dis-incentivized because they have to wait so long for their payment.

@tarazkp | April 15, 2018, 8:51 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

When I first started many of my early jobs, there was a trial period with some percentage withheld. It is common isn't it? Perhaps it would actually incentivize som, maybe 50 percent withheld and if they don't pass 3 months adequately, the other 50 gets burned. I would have to think more on it but without a cost to spam, plagiarise and act like an ass until caught, it is going to be the wild west. The problem is that action is always corrective rather than preventative and it requires the community to catch and act, something the community doesn't do very well at the moment.

@mejustandrew | April 15, 2018, 9:10 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Yeah, this is a better proposal here!

@mejustandrew | April 15, 2018, 9:25 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Actually, I have included this idea in my comment above, it was a pretty good one!

@wizardave | April 17, 2018, 11:07 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

That might work, if earnings were placed in savings to be collected, if they stick around 90 days or whatever and are proven to not be a spammer...

@steevc | April 15, 2018, 7:57 p.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

Would this apply to comments too? A lot of those only make a couple of cents and that may be all some people get. Not that they will get far that way anyway. I can see some merit in the idea, but we have to be wary of alienating the minnows.

Meanwhile others are milking the system for much more with self-votes on junk comments. I'd hope whales can deal with those. That shouldn't be too hard to trace as votes would come from certain accounts.

@timcliff | April 15, 2018, 7:58 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

> Would this apply to comments too?

Yes

> I'd hope whales can deal with those.

Yes, more downvoting (in cases like these) would help as well

@tarazkp | April 15, 2018, 8:40 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

>I'd hope whales can deal with those.

Many that could or would are now blind voting what they are told to.

@steevc | April 15, 2018, 8:48 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Who is telling them? It's up to the whales if Steemit survives. They can go for the short time win or help the platform thrive.

@tarazkp | April 15, 2018, 8:53 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

>Who is telling them?

Come visit y blog from time to time ;)

>They can go for the short time win or help the platform thrive.

It is perhaps a symptom of the crypto sentiment in general, a long hold is 6 months. To build a community takes years.

@fullcoverbetting | April 16, 2018, 9:49 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

@steevc and @tarazkp I am sorry to inform you that due to the new relegations the upvotes of Steve to Tamara has become worthless because I did not meet the threshold! Taraz you can assure that Stevens voting power will not be elimated by upvoting your own comment! Is this the direction we want to go!
I really cannot support this proposal cause it would mean that my upvotes have become worthless! Just like ten thousands of others!

@cryptosenpai | April 15, 2018, 7:57 p.m. | Votes: 4 | [ VOTE ]

"If we increased this threshold up to 0.10 SBD, or even 0.25 or 1.00 SBD - then posts/comments that did not receive sufficient votes to pass this threshold would receive zero payout. This would likely decrease the incentive for users to create spam."

I wonder how many people even read the suggestion...

Sadly, this would be a sure way to destroy the vast majority of new users' ability to earn anything here. As if it's not bad enough at the moment. Now it's really difficult to achieve even 500 SP without a whale buddy upping content regularly. After the suggested change, it would be nearly impossible.

@timcliff | April 15, 2018, 7:59 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

People that are actually contributing things of value should not have a difficult time of earning 0.25 on a post/comment. [Edit] I do acknowledge that earning via posts is harder at first, because users need to build an audience. Starting out by posting quality comments that add value to posts is probably a better way to get started.

@mistakili | April 15, 2018, 8:26 p.m. | Votes: 3 | [ VOTE ]

Yes you are right, should not but sometimes it actually really does take a while to even be having that as a new user, to be honest

@mejustandrew | April 15, 2018, 10:04 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Indeed, and many of them will get very discouraged by the payouts that refuse to come, others may end up thinking that the rewards are fake and that nobody is actually earning anything. I remember that I was suspicious too with the rewards at the beginning and then I did not even believed that the rewards are true. If then I wouldn't got anything on my posts of 10 cents, then I would have been tempted to think that I am right and that the rewards do not even exit, and of course, drop my account...

@cryptosenpai | April 15, 2018, 10:59 p.m. | Votes: 3 | [ VOTE ]

@timcliff "People that are actually contributing things of value should not have a difficult time of earning 0.25 on a post/comment. " Yes, should not.

Look, you are a highly active whale who obviously supports commenters regularly and also your readers upvote each other too, and still barely anyone could earn anything in this comment section after the change. If you as a top whale, who is in the top ~0.1% of all Steemit users(based on SP), would have a hard time avoiding a bunch of rounded down rewards, then what would the 99.9% do? :)

Since this is a new article and we could say it's because of that, I checked an older post. Literally, no one was above 0.25. All of their rewards would be rounded down to 0. That's why I said it would be nearly impossible for the majority to earn anything. That wouldn't be something that could we label as decentralized. Giving power to only a few people to control most of the wealth is what we try to avoid here(not the case but still).

(p.s. Comment upvote bot owners would make a bank too because people would pay big money to get the rewards on their comments up to the minimum. Let's say 0.25 is the minimum, 0.05 is on the comment, so you pay for a 0.21 vote in order to avoid a rounded down reward. -> Yet again, money pouring to a few people/companies -> Less decentralized outcome. -> Random comments stay but from that point, not only the posts but the comments will be massively bot manipulated too. )

@tarazkp Yes, probably people would gravitate towards a place where they could have better outcome. So whales(or vote for vote communities). Like, the top few dozens. Since only they could give an upvote that would not be rounded down. To reward your followers without the help(votes) of others, at the moment you would need a few thousands of SP at least. In case if you have lots of regulars, then you need a lot more. Also, if you would like to calibrate the voting weight too in order to customize rewards based on the quality of comments or would like to spread votes among more people, you would need even more. Minimum tens of thousands or even 100k+. Not much people/communities have that amount.

@timcliff | April 15, 2018, 11:18 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

0.25 is maybe too high then. What about 0.05 then? Another question that should be asked - if a post/comment is not worth a 0.05 upvote (either from one user, or several smaller ones) - is it really adding enough value to the network to be worth getting paid?

@shredz7 | April 16, 2018, 12:16 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

I would say that 0.02-0.03 is the best range, because most spam posts won't be upvoted that high, as most people voting on spam posts have very little SP.

@timcliff | April 16, 2018, 2:40 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

That's pretty much where it is at right now - the limit is 0.02.

@bashadow | April 20, 2018, 4:16 a.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

I am probably in the minority here, but I feel the dust level needs to be lowered to the $0.009 level. So a one cent reward is paid, and less than that gets dusted. The solution for taking care of spam pretty easy, if the Person who made the post has an individual muted, then those muted peoples comment do not show at all for anyone on that post. No one. If I mute @blahblahblahbot then none of his comments should be visible on any post I make.

@oleblueeye | April 25, 2018, 5:37 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

I agree with you @basshadow that the dust level needs to be lowered to 0.009, or possibly even less, or no minimum at all.

While your idea for eliminating spam is a good one, and I do feel that post authors should have some sovereignty over who comments on and/or who gets rewarded in the comments to their posts, I have a tingle that such a move could invite something too close to totalitarian censorship. I mean, so, say I just don't like or disagree with what @blahblahblahwhoever has to say, I can then just eliminate or make invisible any comment they make on my post? Might that not be just a little nit too much power?

I'm not sure though, I'll have to digest your idea a little bit more ;~)

@bashadow | April 25, 2018, 6:04 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

It is your post, lets say it is a post about family, and you are a family friendly person, and that you do not like Nazi speak or porn, or atheist, and your post has absolutely nothing to do with any of those subjects, does my right to free speech allow me to come to your post and spew hatred, eugenics, big bang, links or actual pictures of people having sex expressing their free love on your post. All those just listed are examples of free speech carried to an extreme. They are not furthering engagement on your post. They are shutting it down or detracting from your message. You are not limiting or censoring that person at all. They can make their own post, on those subjects. So whose free speech was censored, Yours or Theirs. You are not telling them they have no right to say what they want, just that they do not have the right to say it in your Home.

@oleblueeye | April 27, 2018, 5:53 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

The debate over free speech vs censorship is an age old one, and I certainly don't think we're going to solve it here in a few comments. Nevertheless, you make some excellent points, @bashadow. You've convinced me. To be honest it wasn't that hard though as I was leaning much more on your side of the fence anyway, I was mostly just playing devil's advocate .

I mean, while I'm all for free speech, I do believe that every man's (or woman's) home, or blog post, is their castle. And I know that if some douchebag was spouting some serious BS or what have you that I strongly disliked or found distasteful on my blog post I'd certainly feel well within my rights to delete.

Thanks for the chat! I love intelligent debate 8-)

@bashadow | April 27, 2018, 6:45 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Like you said it is a debate that will go on for a long time. An individual can not censor another person, if they could it would be against the law to tell anyone anywhere anytime to "Shut Up"! Catch 22.

@oleblueeye | April 30, 2018, 4:35 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Haha. Indeed! Thanks again for an enjoyable debate!

@fullcoverbetting | April 16, 2018, 9:29 p.m. | Votes: 4 | [ VOTE ]

@timcliff if I do understand it correctly that an upvote from me or even other people with an SP below 300 are not good enough to upvote a comment?
Let's take as example that I would write my best article and get 20 great comments on it. It would not be able to upvote these because it would be tossing money out of the window? Since a few day ago an 100% upvote from me wasn't worth more than 0.03, due to the increase of the value of steem, it jumped to 0.05.
But believe it or not I am still the same person! Only no an upvote by me would be worth something while it was not!
Let me tell you what chain reaction this will cause: people will not comment anymore on post by people with an SP below 300, cause an upvote will mean nothing.
People will start up voting their own comments to pas the threshold! Erasing voting power to be given to good article or comments from others! So, the comments of the poor people will stay at the bottom. Does this sound fair to you? Because let's be realistic not everybody takes the time to read all other comments, let online to upvote them!
While I do appreciate the attempt it would kill the steem block chain according to me!
I'm writing around 300 genuine comments per week, I do try to interact as much as possible and also try to change things ( you can read my blogpost from last Friday)!
I know that people are not equal on the steem block chain, but this would create an even bigger gap in the inequality!
Just my 2 cents, oops sorry 2 cents isn't enough value to the network!
Sorry couldn't leave that out!
Cheers,
Peter

@timcliff | April 17, 2018, 1:29 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Hehe, actually 2 cents is just enough ;)

@fullcoverbetting | April 17, 2018, 6:47 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

@timcliff
Well at the moment it would be, but if we are going to change this, then it would be wasted! Normally I would give you an $0.01 upvote, but after reading your post it became clear to me that it would become dust! So, you will get my 2 cents :)
When a post or comment doesn't get to 2 cents, what is happening with the 1 cent? Does it go back to the reward pool or will it just be burned?

@timcliff | April 17, 2018, 1:46 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

It goes back to the rewards pool.

@fullcoverbetting | April 17, 2018, 2:12 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Thx for the answer!

@maverickinvictus | April 19, 2018, 4:51 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Damn this is what I am looking for. that comment that because we dont have enough SP we can't reward good comments because of the whole dust thing.

@minismallholding | April 18, 2018, 11:46 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Your theory seems sound, but it doesn't take into account niches. For example, my area is gardening and homesteading and the only account on here for that interest who might be able to give a comment a vote of that value is @papa-pepper. As you can imagine, he is only one account, so although I've conversed with him I've never had an upvote from him. He prioritises the people he can also work with offline, as he should, because that is what homesteading is about.

Okay, I'm willing to concede that increasing the comment payout might sort out the wheat from the chaff, but I've been here a while and my full upvote is still not at that level. After all the work I've put in to trying to increase my SP I'd be really disappointed not to be able to reward an amazing comment with a payout worthy vote. I've only recently discovered that I need to get it to 0.02 or more to even net them a payout, so I've been increasing my votes or not upvoting at all.

@timcliff | April 19, 2018, 12:06 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

I am hopeful that once communities get rolled out (hopeful soon) it will significantly help with niche content such as your gardening and homesteading areas.

@minismallholding | April 19, 2018, 12:17 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

As am I! 😊

@oleblueeye | April 25, 2018, 5:41 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Me too!

@tarazkp | April 15, 2018, 8:29 p.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

>I wonder how many people even read the suggestion...

Nice photo! I love to travel also.

>Sadly, this would be a sure way to destroy the vast majority of new users' ability to earn anything here.

Potentially or, it will drive them to where they could actually earn more which is the community nodes who regularly read, engage and upvote comments if worthy. I am not ure about this suggestion but some experiments would be welcome at the moment considering the shape of the platform.

@gamsam | April 15, 2018, 7:59 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

This would be of really great help I suppose. I think though 1SBD, even 0.25 is quite on the high side.
There are some real genuine comments that are made and rewarded with much less than 1SBD.

I also think most spam comments get below 0.05. That should be the threshold

@isnochys | April 15, 2018, 8:01 p.m. | Votes: 5 | [ VOTE ]

If you want users to leave this platform even faster, set it higher.
Because if they don't get at least a simple payout on their first posts, why the hell stay here, where only rich people win?
Just try it out.
Open a fresh account, not connected I any way to your user and stay under cover for some weeks.

@timcliff | April 15, 2018, 8:05 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

I know how hard it is to get started. It took me 3-4 months of constant posting to get noticed when I first started. I've seen the same thing with friends that I've gotten to signup.

@isnochys | April 15, 2018, 8:09 p.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

With way less users to get noticed..
It was a small puddle on year ago.
These days it is a sea to fight against.
Way harder to get noticed. And those little payout are good motivation bursts. To not go back to Facebook or other platforms

@mejustandrew | April 15, 2018, 9:09 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

True words here, unfortunately nobody will scroll to the bottom on this page to see the rest of the comments. Whales these days seem to have forgot how it is to get started...

@shredz7 | April 16, 2018, 12:13 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Lol that is exactly what I was doing...

@omitaylor | April 19, 2018, 5 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

I am 11 screens and scrolling and still reading. Interesting to see the 50 rep comments sitting down here with so much validity lol.

@stimialiti | April 15, 2018, 8:59 p.m. | Votes: 4 | [ VOTE ]

It took me 3-4 months just to have enough SBD to be able to give myself any reward, and my SP alone is still not enough for it, and no, I will keep powering down as fast as I can.

@preparedwombat | April 15, 2018, 9:52 p.m. | Votes: 3 | [ VOTE ]

I have no plans to powerdown for a long time. Accruing SP makes so much sense.

Maybe I’ll siphon off some SBD a year or two from now, but not any Steem Power. For better or worse, I’m here for the long haul.

@stimialiti | April 15, 2018, 10:47 p.m. | Votes: 7 | [ VOTE ]

I believe the long haul is mostly in the past, that STEEM without deletions and without any organic incentives towards maintenance of its free interface (steemit.com) is unsustainable, and that the current management is worse than just incompetent.
For all of these reasons, I wish to diversify out of STEEM.
I want to remain, but I wish I could trade some of my STEEM and SBD for a better currency.
The concept of STEEM makes it the most useful digital currency I know about, and I have to admit I did not study BYTEBALL enough.
Its implementation makes it a failed experiment.

@profitbot | April 17, 2018, 2:02 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

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@youtake | April 17, 2018, 2:47 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

@youtake pulls you up ! This vote was sent to you by @stimialiti!

@whalecreator | April 17, 2018, 3:47 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

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@luckyvotes | April 20, 2018, 1:59 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

You got a 11.11% upvote from @luckyvotes courtesy of @stimialiti!

@sleeplesswhale | April 20, 2018, 2:11 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

You got a 12.50% upvote from @sleeplesswhale courtesy of @stimialiti!

@revisesociology | April 15, 2018, 8:05 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

It would certainly make people think twice about their comments, and put more effort into them.

However, while it certainly wouldn't do you any harm, and me very little harm if the dust threshold was increased, it would damage new users more, so it's a good idea, but a difficult thing to balance.

A sensible approach to implementing any increase would thus be to do it very gradually - raise the threshold to 0.05 for example, see what happens for a month, then up it from there if necessary.

@debbietiyan | April 15, 2018, 8:07 p.m. | Votes: 3 | [ VOTE ]

> What are the potential negative consequences?

I think one of those would be, throwing-the-baby-with-the-bathwater effect.

Because some of us minnows still have less than 150sp, and when the voting power is less than 100%, the value of our upvote would be about 0.01 (depending on the price of steem), and it would be unfair if these meagre sign of appreciation we give out to the steemians who take out their time to read our stuff, doesn't count anymore.

@timcliff | April 15, 2018, 8:19 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

They would count though - if the post/comment they voted on got other votes too. Let's say we set the threshold to 0.10 SBD. If each user votes and adds 0.01 to the comment, and the comment gets 10 of these votes - then there will be a payout of 0.10.

@fullcoverbetting | April 16, 2018, 9:40 p.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

Please take a look in this comment section and see how many comments did get 10 upvote or more. And here a lot of wintered stemians are discussing not a lot of newbies.
Take a look at blogs from red fish or plankton and see how many comments or view they are getting. I really don't find it realistic from a beginners viewpoint.
I did this comment of you multiple times. Do you remember how hard it was to get ten upvote to a post? Let alone a comment!

@timcliff | April 17, 2018, 1:32 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

I'll ask you this question though: from an investor standpoint - for people looking to buy STEEM with the expectation/hope that it will go up in value, they see the rewards pool as the funding for their investment. As investors, they get to vote on the content/contributions that the feel are going to make them the most money. Does some random person commenting on a post that few people find valuable enough to upvote add any value to their investment? Are any of those comments going to increase the value of STEEM?

@fullcoverbetting | April 17, 2018, 7 a.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

Don't get me wrong, I do understand that you are trying to fight spam and did come up with a solution! As we can see in the comments the steem blockchain has several populations. The whales and Orca, the upper class, the dolphins and minnows, which are the middle class and the red fishes, which are the lower class.
Lots of interaction is going on here, which is good with such an important proposal to the system!
But I did read all the reactions and I think that we can say, that the sentiment is diverse!
I do understand that you are willing to protect investments, but we have to be careful not to disrupt the ecosystem with the change, which I think that could be possible.
Lately I did read a lot of post if we should run our blogs with the heart or like a business, also there the sentiment was mixed!
Your proposal does give me the feeling about running it like a CEO, where you do want to protect the investors more than the employees or customers. I compare it with a company which is making enough profit but want to make more to satisfy the investors even more and therefor firing some people to decrease the costs!
I'm honest that I don't have another solution, but I think that we can agree that no matter whatever solution will be chosen that we will never to eliminate SPAM! Look at all the mailboxes in the world. Lot's of spam prevention has been enforced and still spam rules the mailboxes!
Maybe we should better educate the users so that they won't reward SPAM!
I'm happy to discuss this further with you!

@timcliff | April 17, 2018, 1:48 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Good suggestion :)

@reazuliqbal | April 15, 2018, 8:08 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

This may help with controlling spam comments. But I think cons will be more than the pros. When I started I received a few 0.01-0.03 rewards which eventually turned into dust. I can tell you it didn't feel good.

I have friends who don't get to 0.10 usually, I imagine there are many more like them. So, if they don't get anything, many will leave the platform, many even may not start using the platform.

We can try educating people on how to interact with the community, punish repeat/serial offenders by flagging, also I think we should count author reputation along with comment reward in sorting comments. This way those spammy comments will be listed way below and may not catch authors/voters attention.

@timcliff | April 15, 2018, 8:20 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

> When I started I received a few 0.01-0.03 rewards which eventually turned into dust. I can tell you it didn't feel good.

A UI change is needed for this, even if the dust threshold is not changed. I agree, it makes for a very bad UX. I opened an issue for it a while ago: https://github.com/steemit/condenser/issues/1819

@aporna | April 15, 2018, 8:18 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

There is still a symptom when we all know how darts are created thousands of new accounts every day, which is the upstream registration of string steam, especially when a regular user takes time from the week until listed, we will have to intervene before signing the boat before they catch the root , These circumstances probably increase their size to meet new dust thresholds, otherwise. may be

@timcliff | April 15, 2018, 8:48 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Replied to a similar comment in a thread above.

@muphy | April 15, 2018, 8:18 p.m. | Votes: 3 | [ VOTE ]

I agree with many of the comments I have read: A threshold equal or above 0.10SBD would most probably diserve the platform: The first pennies do count, they count a lot psychologically, more than the dollars that may follow further in the path of the Steemiam.

In addition, if the spammer purchases a little SP or even SP delegation, he could upvote himself to pass the threshold...

Wouldn't there be some more efficient way to prevent this kind of abuse? for example, a code that would screen the content of posts and comments, and if the same series of words repeat in different posts and comments N times in a period T, then all revenue on these posts is put back in the pool. Of course more reflexion needs to be put into it, in order to consider all cases and not hurt genuine posts inadvertantly. A starting point would be to define the threshold for detection (N/T) as a function of the length of the post, of the flag ratio of the user, etc...

@timcliff | April 15, 2018, 8:25 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

> for example, a code that would screen the content of posts and comments, and if the same series of words repeat in different posts and comments N times in a period T, then all revenue on these posts is put back in the pool. Of course more reflexion needs to be put into it, in order to consider all cases and not hurt genuine posts inadvertantly. A starting point would be to define the threshold for detection (N/T) as a function of the length of the post, of the flag ratio of the user, etc...

It is an interesting idea, and not ruling it out - but the code for both the Steem blockchain and steemit.com (condenser) is open source, so whatever rules are put in place, it would not be very hard for an abuser to figure out what they are and code around them.

@muphy | April 15, 2018, 8:37 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

This argument makes sense, however all is a questions of stats: How many spammers would have the knowledge necessary to do that?

Yet, on second thought, you just need one person to translate the code to english, and post it... So all algorythmic rules are out of the game...

On third thought maybe not, if there is an engagement button: what about an anonymous Spammy button? If too many 'spammies' appear on a user, there could be an alert for anti-spam / fishing moderators like @arcange. A spammer account is easy to recognise on inspection.

@timcliff | April 15, 2018, 8:47 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Communities will have something along these lines

@revisesociology | April 15, 2018, 8:48 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Nice suggestion, re the checking for the same series of words coding.

@preparedwombat | April 15, 2018, 9:44 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

>The first pennies do count, they count a lot psychologically

This.

My first six posts earned nothing. My seventh earned two cents. I had arrived.

@pfunk | April 15, 2018, 8:20 p.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

>What are the potential negative consequences?

Influence disenfranchisement of lower SP holders.

@timcliff | April 15, 2018, 8:22 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

It is pretty similar to non-linear rewards though, and with a pretty low barrier to have an impact. Plus, a vote that is less than whatever the threshold would not be wasted - if the post/comment reaches the threshold, then whatever payout the low-payout vote added would be included in the total.

Let's say we set the threshold to 0.10 SBD. If each user votes and adds 0.01 to the comment, and the comment gets 10 of these votes - then there will be a payout of 0.10.

@happyme | April 18, 2018, 4:44 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

With new user votes at 0.001, it takes 10 users to earn 1 cent and 100 users voting to earn 10 cents. With new users lucky to get 10 votes, how are they to meet these requirements?

@timcliff | April 19, 2018, 12:03 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

That is by design. New users who have not earned any of their own stake yet do not really have a vested interest in the platform. The expectation should not be for 10 or 100 new users to be able to join up and be able to start having a significant influence over rewards right away. If they participate and add value though - then over time the value of their vote should increase.

@happyme | April 19, 2018, 12:20 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

> significant influence over rewards right away.

You totally baffled me with that comment. Someone earning 10 cents from 100 votes is a significant influence? Very few new users can even hope to get 10 voters to vote for them, let alone 100. If they manage to get 100 votes then they must be very exceptional. Even then, 10 cents is hardly a major influence in my books.

So, if they can't earn their first cent, HOW are they supposed to EVER get their own SP to increase the value of their own votes over time? Am I missing something or misunderstanding your proposal?

@timcliff | April 19, 2018, 1:24 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Nobody said they couldn't earn their first cent. That is the whole point. They should be looking to earn more SP so that they can actually have a vote that is worth something. The intention was never for brand new users who have not invested anything (not even time to earn some rewards) to have influence.

@happyme | April 19, 2018, 5:06 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

OK, then I must be misinterpreting something. Please help me and others like myself to understand what the proposal actually says.

The way I understand it is that new users who post something cannot actually earn anything unless the value of their post is greater than 10 cents, 25 cents or even $1 in order to prevent people from making SPAM posts. If that were to be implemented, then without the help of a benevolent dolphin or whale, the likelihood of these new users earning anything would be slim to none, because mostly other new users will be voting on their articles. I often don't make over $1 on my articles, so even I would be held back if this were to be implemented at the $1 threshold. So let's say the threshold is set at 10 cents. In that case, I'll be fine for my articles, but many times my comments will receive only a vote worth 1 to 7 cents. With a 10 cent threshold, would that mean that any comment receiving less than 10 cents would be considered SPAM and get zero pay-out?

This is not about influence; it is about cutting off the earnings of those who already earn very little and have practically no influence anyway.

Are we interpreting the proposal incorrectly? If so, a lot of people are unnecessarily concerned and would appreciate being set straight. Thanks!

@timcliff | April 19, 2018, 3:34 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

The information in your recent reply is accurate. I think we started talking about two different things (the value of a new user’s vote, and the earnings a new user would make under the proposal), and the conversations got a little confused. It seems pretty clear from the feedback that the majority of the community sees more “cons” than “pros” from this change - so I don’t expect it will go anywhere.

@happyme | April 19, 2018, 4:25 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Super! Thanks.
I do appreciate the fact that people are constantly looking for methods to address the problems faced here and a healthy discussion will bring out all the various points of view on any given idea. These ideas must be discussed in order to flush out things that we may not have thought about since there are consequences to every action. Please don't be discouraged. Failure is just another reason to try again. And try we must because there is a lot at stake here. I wish I had THE solution, but I don't. I made several suggestions months ago but have run out of ideas for now. If I come up with anything new, I'll be sure to bring it up.

Cheers and thanks again!

@stimialiti | April 15, 2018, 8:56 p.m. | Votes: 5 | [ VOTE ]

This is a part of how Steemit killed me when I was young.

@luckyvotes | April 20, 2018, 1:49 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

You got a 14.29% upvote from @luckyvotes courtesy of @stimialiti!

@sleeplesswhale | April 20, 2018, 1:54 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

You got a 16.67% upvote from @sleeplesswhale courtesy of @stimialiti!

@proffit | April 20, 2018, 9:26 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

You got a 21.43% upvote from @proffit courtesy of @stimialiti!

@mistakili | April 15, 2018, 8:21 p.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

. Increasing threshold means increasing the amount of inactive users, because if we first consider users who are earning less than 0.1 they must be almost 40% of new users, and these few 0.09's they are getting keeps them coming back. If that is taken from them, then inactive accounts will flood the place.

You see spammers are users without knowledge, i will recommend some sort of compulsory guide to new users, like a driving school, where they have to pass before they can step ahead into the main platform.

However, increasing the threshold will work, because users will have the need to do better, and be more cautious of their bandwidth, but as i have stated, there needs to be proper guide for new users. Information is knowledge and it helps proper application

@tarazkp | April 15, 2018, 8:25 p.m. | Votes: 4 | [ VOTE ]

What about a small 0.005 (arbitrary number) cost to comment an post? Perhaps it could be wiped out if the comment gets rewarded more than that. If there is a cost to comment, wouldn't that make people think a little more and also target their comments to where they may actually earn something rather than spamming indiscriminately?

The problem with many things here is that there is no direct cost to engaging in any particular bad behaviour until caught meaning someone in the community has to not only see it but take the initiative to shine a light on it. Up until the point that @steemcleaners or @cheetah flag automatically, all gains are profit.

This is the same for plagiarism and ordering bidbot votes on nonsense.

@alexdory | April 15, 2018, 9:21 p.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

I am a SteemSTEM honor member, mentor and engagement officer and i make a lot of comments (some are very long) and very few of them get any votes. We are trying to make others engage, comment and socialize, we are educating them to prevent plagiarism and spam. And it's working, and like me are tens more. Adding a cost to socialize and make friends is prohibitive. I consider myself one of the good guys, I don't self upvote or use bots.
This will ban the people we are educating to build upon the community.

@tarazkp | April 15, 2018, 9:28 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

>I am a SteemSTEM honor member, mentor and engagement officer and i make a lot of comments (some are very long) and very few of them get any votes.

It sounds like you work for the government ;)

In another comment I added in this chain somewhere I also suggested *payment withheld' on new members joining the system until after some trial period . This would likely help you a great deal in your public servant position working for community development as it will lesson the people wasting your time.

@alexdory | April 15, 2018, 9:43 p.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

Part of my goal here is to take people which show promise, educate them, help them write better articles and make them socialize and get noticed. The rate of success is small, adding another hurdle will reduce the comments they will make and thus their exposure and their involvement.
Do you think that people will post quality things while in the trial period? They will post "nice article" until the trial period is done. Then they will post "nice article". Because what is changing in their mentality? Psychologically speaking? Why would he not?

@tarazkp | April 15, 2018, 10 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Because, they will be flagged, much like they are now and lose their earning potentials. Anything earn up until that point will be burned. It might not be a time thing at all, it could be 1000 comments.

The education of these people is absolutely atrocious and that seems to be before they even get to Steemit. The onboarding here is non-existent and none of the suggestions to UI tweaks that have been offered up to improve behaviour from day one have been implemented. Still, something has to be done.

This is a 'get paid for content' site, there should be a few hurdles. work needs to be done before the pay.

@alexdory | April 15, 2018, 10:11 p.m. | Votes: 3 | [ VOTE ]

I have observed that the lack of education about such comments is to blame.
Which means that they will spam and lose until they will get educated, case in which initial spam won't be reduced by much, and I rarely see accounts over 40 spamming.
I have nothing wrong with reducing spam, it's just that I don't want it to be the equivelent of chemo: poison everything and we hope that the bad ones die before the good ones.

@tarazkp | April 16, 2018, 8:48 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

>I have observed that the lack of education about such comments is to blame.

Yes, it should be better outlined at onboarding but, thinking that the introduceyourself tag is filled with bidbots, they come in knowing something.

As said, the education seems bad before they come onto the platform considering what people seem to think being social is.

>and I rarely see accounts over 40 spamming.

I see quite a few.

@alexdory | April 16, 2018, 10:17 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

I will always fight to educate people here. I am also doubling my rewards with my own bought Steem from Bittrex.
From my experience, as soon as we educate them, 99% give up their behavior. They do it because they see others doing it, they think they are tricking the system & it has something to do with how they rank themselves as more intelligent than others, hence the sense of righteousness of their actions.
I have managed to get 30+ people to give up their vote selling by talking in detail to them (Discord and comments).

I think that this is one of the problems of the world we are living in, putting ourselves (let's say the more educated) vs the less educated. Any of our rules will be seen as an attempt to maintain our wealth and status. It's how psych works when you are poor and uneducated.

Also for @timcliff:
I would love to talk more about this, I am not here primarily to make money, so we will talk again. I will get more involved in creating this better world. I might also be wrong, but a healthy discussion is what we need.

@beat-the-bookies | April 16, 2018, 8:24 a.m. | Votes: 9 | [ VOTE ]

I have a proposal for you guys with 70+ rep and 10k+ SP: make an account not traceable back to you, and start posting and engaging with people here. You'll stop with this silly proposals.

Sorry if I sound too harsh, but the reality of your experience here on steemit doesn't match that of an average steemian. You are followed around by an army of ass kissers and even your farts are upvoted to hell. An average small fish is putting his/her heart and soul into creating something here only to see it go unnoticed. For the most part, we are shouting in the dark.

The engagement rates on steemit are abysmal and you propose to tax it (thus lowering it still). Please, create an anon account and start posting. Do it as an experiment in order to see what the most of us experience on a daily basis.

I've won a contest last month and got 75 SP delegated for a month. I've been doing my best to spread that $0.01 vote of mine around the sports betting community in order to encourage folks to not give up. I've been posting comments cheering them up, providing feedback,... Your proposal is pissing on people like me. Sorry for the anger in my response, but think twice before proposing that stuff. You're big enough for the devs to listen to you. For the opinion of people like me, nobody cares.

Don't, by having a good intention, drive the nail into the steemit's coffin. Cheers

@tarazkp | April 16, 2018, 8:45 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Have you had a close look at my blog? Have you gone back to the start? Do you see the rewards that go to the hundreds of minnow who do engage well on my account? None of them would be affected by this proposal because they engage well and don't spam. I can only speak for myself but, if people actually put the effort I do into this place into their work, they would likely do very well in time. It is an investment isn't it? Investments have a cost and their is no guarantee of return.

>The engagement rates on steemit are abysmal and you propose to tax it (thus lowering it still).

Again, drop by my blog. Engagement rates are abysmal for many reasons, one of them is because of Spam posts, spam comments, spam bots that add no value to the system but do extract some.

>I have a proposal for you guys with 70+ rep and 10k+ SP: make an account not traceable back to you, and start posting and engaging with people here. You'll stop with this silly proposals.

I have a few dozen people I have brought onto the platform and helped, some do quite well now. This is a social media isn't it? It is about being social and engaging with the community. None of them spammed to get their start. If people come in and expect to spam for reward without engaging in the community, should they earn?

It takes work to earn here and that work is going to increase as more and more come onto the platform. If one wants to treat it like facebook, do not expect earnings.

Because their is only upside to acting like an ass here, there are a lot of people acting like asses. What you call a silly proposal is work towards real solutions and trials in the early stages of a startup.

So now, What is your suggestion to stop spam posts and comments?

@beat-the-bookies | April 16, 2018, 9:59 a.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

I appreciate your reply. Thanks for not ignoring me.

>Do you see the rewards that go to the hundreds of minnow who do engage well on my account? None of them would be affected by this proposal because they engage well and don't spam.

I see where you're coming from. You see the small fish on your account engaging meaningfully and getting properly rewarded for it. Props to you for taking care of your community, but most of us are not on your blog engaging with you. Our interests lie elsewhere and I don't appreciate the proposals that will damage my community.

Try to see a perspective of somebody who's not following the big accounts here, somebody who's interested in a niche topic that sports betting is. There are no big accounts there, and the most members have less than 0.01 vote. What's worse, the nature of the beast is such that great essays, photo travel logs, recipes and such are not to be found (no chance to get @curie reward or to be featured by @ocd).

The most valuable content a member of our community can produce is the tip. Which outcome to bet on. We don't care for 2000+ words essays, we care about the profitability of your tips. Now, you may call the content we produce to be not worthy of the reward, but I can say the same thing for the umpteenth artsy fartsy post by someone well versed in the gentle art of kissing up to the whales.

Should we all drop what we are doing and line up for the crumbs the big accounts are bestowing upon us? Screw that!

Every proposal that discourages the engagement is beyond silly - it is suicidal. With the eos around the corner and the panic that will ensue here, the last thing needed is to piss on the small guys just because the big ones are tired of seeing spam.

>So now, What is your suggestion to stop spam posts and comments?

Whack-a-Mole. Do as I and report the spam to the steemcleaners when you encounter it. It takes time to get an account here, and mere seconds to get it flagged to death by them. The solution we have works well enough.

Don't fight a relatively minor problem this platform has by solutions that would kill it completely. If the solutions the two of you proposed are to be implemented the steemit is done for.

See the numbers in the reports that @paulag is making. Spam is not this platform's problem. Dead accounts and meager engagement are.

@tarazkp | April 16, 2018, 10:16 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

>Thanks for not ignoring me.

Besides spam that i will generally flag, my ignoring is usually oversight.

>Our interests lie elsewhere and I don't appreciate the proposals that will damage my community.

This is a big part of it. You have your community but you might be missing the community nodes who can support it.

>Try to see a perspective of somebody who's not following the big accounts here, somebody who's interested in a niche topic that sports betting is.

This goes to my previous point, it needs more nodes but, those nodes need to be built outside of the niche (or people buy in) and spread wider. There isn't enough diversity of distribution here but, that is because of the infancy of the system.

> What's worse, the nature of the beast is such that great essays, photo travel logs, recipes and such are not to be found (no chance to get @curie reward or to be featured by @ocd).

The seem to focus on great essays but for example, @acidyo who runs @ocd also runs this kind of thing:
https://steemit.com/sfpl/@acidyo/steem-fantasy-premier-league-gameweek-34-review-and-match-prediction-game

>The most valuable content a member of our community can produce is the tip. Which outcome to bet on. We don't care for 2000+ words essays, we care about the profitability of your tips. Now, you may call the content we produce to be not worthy of the reward, but I can say the same thing for the umpteenth artsy fartsy post by someone well versed in the gentle art of kissing up to the whales.

As you said, it is a niche and if there is not the value in your niche to support at the level you want, you have to go wider. Do you think that writing 1000+ word posts is a lucrative business model that people just naturally love to engage with?

>Should we all drop what we are doing and line up for the crumbs the big accounts are bestowing upon us? Screw that!

You can do what you want here but, don't have expectations on reward as there are no guarantees.

>Whack-a-Mole. Do as I and report the spam to the steemcleaners when you encounter it. It takes time to get an account here, and mere seconds to get it flagged to death by them. The solution we have works well enough.

you should ask @patrice about the work to combat spam and plagiarism.

>See the numbers in the reports that @paulag is making. Spam is not this platform's problem. Dead accounts and meager engagement are.

There are many issues here, the dead accounts aren't necessarily truly dead or, may never have lived to begin with. People come in with expectations of quick rewards and a week or two later are burned out. Not much of an investment.

As said, this proposal is just that a proposal but again, I ask, what is your solution to your problem?

@beat-the-bookies | April 16, 2018, 10:34 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

>Besides spam that i will generally flag, my ignoring is usually oversight.

Getting ignored when you're a small account is a rather common experience. So, thanks again for not being a jerk.

>As said, this proposal is just that a proposal but again, I ask, what is your solution to your problem?

I'm generally happy with the platform as it is. I've met through it some interesting people around the world and I don't have unrealistic expectations regarding my earnings here.

I see it on a daily basis that even my puny $0.01 upvote has a positive reaction and gets the ones who receive it to engage more and invest into producing content. Yours and @timcliff's proposals are a problem for me. They'll make my engagement here harder or in the case of latter completely meaningless.

All I ask is to take into consideration the guys like me when you make the proposals to change this platform. If we succeed and help even smaller account than we are to succeed, you guys will be millionaires. If you kill us off, you'll end up seeing STEEM having the same price as DOGE.

@tarazkp | April 16, 2018, 11:49 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

>Getting ignored when you're a small account is a rather common experience. So, thanks again for not being a jerk.

For me it is sometimes hard considering I write long posts which tend to attract long comments. Someone did the maths for me last week and in the previous seven days I had written around ~47,000 words with 40% of them being in comments.

>I see it on a daily basis that even my puny $0.01 upvote has a positive reaction and gets the ones who receive it to engage more and invest into producing content.

The most valuable thing you can do for your account is to use your vote to support the people who take the time to comment well, even if it isn't much or even a payout. It shows some appreciation for their time and effort. It isn't meaningless.

>All I ask is to take into consideration the guys like me when you make the proposals to change this platform.

Most of my content about Steem is helping guys like you but, it may not always look like it if you take one piece in isolation.

>If you kill us off, you'll end up seeing STEEM having the same price as DOGE.

Didn't McAfee say Doge is the future. ;)

@beat-the-bookies | April 16, 2018, 12:14 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

>Most of my content about Steem is helping guys like you but, it may not always look like it if you take one piece in isolation.

I'll admit that my knowledge is at best partial when it comes to the steemit as a whole. For example, until today I didn't even know you've existed and you're one of the biggest and most active guys around (~47k words in 7 days).

After rereading my comments I can see how you can interpret it as an attack on you (one piece in isolation), but I assure you it is not.

My usual experience is engaging with guys in a community where even $0.01 is nothing to sneeze at, in a community where members are waiting for $0.08 payout to clear in order to power up,... and there are you guys proposing to take that power from me :-)

Anyhow, it's time to get some work done. Cheers!

@tarazkp | April 16, 2018, 12:31 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

no worries, it was nice to talk with you. I am not shy nor unaccustomed to being questioned here for my thoughts. Take care and we can talk again some time.

@freebornangel | April 17, 2018, 5:33 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

>There isn't enough diversity of distribution here but, that is because of the infancy of the system.

And this feature insures that there never will be.

Too many features here rely on the insiders finding bigger fools to buy in rather than to actually encourage sustainable growth.
This is very telling of who the golden boys are as well as the mindset of those that create them.

@omitaylor | April 19, 2018, 4:40 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Bigger fools indeed. Great point. And that's what most want it seems. They want my/your 5 million sitting in SP, selling the upvotes, and to go about ones merry way like anyone successful would do rather than actually try to use Steemit. Afterall, if we are so valuable, shouldn't we be inventing space ships? But no, don't power down. It's a gift forever. I'm confused. Lol

@freebornangel | April 19, 2018, 4:54 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

There was no guarantee that steem would survive more than a year, so they decided to scam as much as they could, then, when it was obvious that steem was here to stay, they decided to scam as much could, and here we are waiting for the scammers to find some shame.
Smdh.

@freebornangel | April 17, 2018, 5:16 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

So our voiçe is only valuable once blessed by a golden boy?

Bring back the n(something) and a 100mv vote cap until we get enough users to slowly raise the cap.

@happyme | April 18, 2018, 4:20 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

> I have a few dozen people I have brought onto the platform and helped (bolding added by me).

EXACTLY!
New users NEED to be helped, otherwise they are totally LOST among the vote-buying bots and other gimmicks. I'm finally out of the dust stage and made it into the minnow category, yet even after a year of working hard and honorable, I don't have 1,000 SP despite putting everything I earn into SP. The way the system works, the more users that come on-board, the harder it is for the new users to earn anything at all. Putting greater barriers on the new users is not the way to grow the platform. Without those helpful votes from dolphins and whales, it is pretty much hopeless to start from nothing at this point in time. I've had a few random big votes or curation trails land on my posts and let me tell you; it's like winning a lottery!

Please don't stop at helping only your friends, but spread some love around, because the platform desperately needs that now. There is no reason why Steem couldn't be a real currency already in use, except for the mindset of those in control.

@omitaylor | April 19, 2018, 4:42 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Another point, most new users won't have built in mentorship. To have empathy, you must experience it for yourself to the point of feeling it first hand.

@happyme | April 19, 2018, 5:23 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

My point exactly.

@omitaylor | April 19, 2018, 4:32 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

And what do you propose for all the new users that downloaded the Steepshot App from the appstore?

@krischik | April 20, 2018, 3:20 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Your account is more then a year old. Times where different then. Times where different six month ago. Voting power for plankton is on a decrease.

> the hundreds of minnow

And what about the plankton?

> very well in time.

that in time is getting longer and probably exponentially. I don't think you can reach dolphin in one year any more. Heck you are now hard pressed to become minnow in a year.

@omitaylor | April 19, 2018, 4:29 a.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

Exactly, and all those 0.01 comments were not paid to any of them. In fact, it cost you voting power to basically lead them on. You spent part of that delegated time frame putting miles on your mouse.

@beat-the-bookies | April 19, 2018, 5:27 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

And there I thought I'm rewarding the efforts of the newcomers... what a downer.

Nevertheless, knowing what I know now, I'd do it again. My efforts didn't go completely unnoticed and my participation in this discussion had some people take a closer look at what I'm doing. The end result of me making noise and putting miles on my mouse is that I've got 550 SP delegated to continue doing what I did so far.

The only thing I regret is destroying my voting power. It will take me at least a week to regenerate it :-)

@minismallholding | April 18, 2018, 11:24 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

My problem with that idea is that when you're commenting and encouraging small members you often don't get any upvotes because they have to vote at 100%, so they limit their votes. It could become costly to then communicate with them and they would lose even more encouragement. When I started a little community of homesteaders were encouraging and looking out for each other. Our votes were near worthless, but the communication was priceless because it kept us going. A fee would have stopped that dead. We could have moved communication to discord maybe, but it takes away from a discussion focused on a post that could add value.

@aggroed | April 15, 2018, 8:25 p.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

It should be easy enough to up this incrementally. I'd rather not just to 1sbd, but I'm fully on board trying 0.5SBD and seeing what happens.

@mejustandrew | April 15, 2018, 8:48 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

I wouldn't go there, see my comment at this post, @aggroed, please. You were once a minnow and this is how you started, with $0.1. You remember how hard that was, this change is killing newcomers...

@mattclarke | April 16, 2018, 2:15 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

What happens to the newcomers if all the whales leave for a competitor not drowning in spam?

@mejustandrew | April 16, 2018, 4:49 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Well, I have seen whales and big dolphins educating their followers not to spam, flagging them and so on. And it actually worked, that people had a clear comment section, with really good comments and construcrive discussion at their posts. I know that investors are really needed, but I also know that without the traffic that this blockchain has,it will also be less valuable. There are investors that come to Steem because it has a great user-base and they can post articles which will have thousands of views if not tens of thousands of views. Imagine all of these things if we had a 10x the activity that we currently have, it will be huge. This proposal does not favors anybody, not even whales, even though it seems like it does because it reduces spam. If you take away all of the minnows, Steem will be left with a few hundred (if not even less) users who will be able to exchange their votes and comment between them and I really don't believe that this is what we want. Not to mention that some of these whales that can take their stake and walk away are actually people who mined for their Steem and did not put any real money into this blockchain, but who cashed out a lot.

This is what I think about it :)

@omitaylor | April 19, 2018, 5:35 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

What happens to the whales if it's a website where all 400 of them can hang out alone with each other?

@habib572 | April 15, 2018, 8:30 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Very good job so nice carry on.

@msp3k | April 15, 2018, 8:32 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

[IMAGE: https://i.imgur.com/GU9jFP9.png]

This post has been resteemed from MSP3K courtesy of @aggroed from the Minnow Support Project ( @minnowsupport ).

Bots Information:
- @lovejuice
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Join the P.A.L. Discord | Check out MSPSteem | Listen to MSP-Waves

@drakos | April 15, 2018, 8:40 p.m. | Votes: 5 | [ VOTE ]

On one hand, I think it's a great idea to deter spam profitability. But on the other hand, the impact on minnows would be great. Legit new comers already struggle for their pennies, especially when new account delegations have been slashed down to 14 SP. I often get users freaking out why they haven't received their payout worth in pennies, only to realize they're simply too eager to earn and didn't wait for the full 7 day period to elapse.

Considering the increase in users from poor countries, I feel it would be a devastating experience for them to increase the threshold to 0.10 SBD.

I think spam should be also addressed with better algorithms to throttle posting. It's nothing new, such mechanisms already exist for email spammers, why not have the same on Steem?

@sircork | April 18, 2018, 6:52 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Throttling frustrates power users who move quickly responding to dozens of mentions, comments and posts about me or my projects every day, but if it meant that spammers were throttled by IP, say on a time-increasing curve with each post, woot woot, and such, same could maybe be done for signup.

rule per ip address:
first comment/signup immediate
5 second timer
second comment/signup
10 second timer
third comment/signup
15 second timer
etc perhaps.
all the way up to a 45 second delay
then if you wait 60 seconds after last comment/signup submitted, then reset the clock.

@omitaylor | April 19, 2018, 4:55 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Wisdom. Also, users of the other apps built on the blockchain could be widely negatively affected by such ideas. Imagine the drop in innovation.

@beeyou | April 15, 2018, 8:40 p.m. | Votes: 8 | [ VOTE ]

Hi Tim. I had not known about the $0.02 post/comment threshold. Thank you for sharing because I now know to meet that minimum to show my support on comments.

I understand the need to combat spam. However, setting such a high threshold to 0.10 SBD, or even 0.25 or 1.00 SBD would mean many newbies will lose the small support they are getting now. Many quality posts receive pennies due to it being lost in the Steemit feeds. Some are lucky to break out of the 1 SBD mark if they try to grow organically. Setting a high threshold that would result in no payout would discourage the few lingering to give up hope completely on steemit.

The change would mean not being able to give newbies their Newbie Nickel as @davemccoy likes to do for newbies that engage within our community. Many of us don't have the SP to even give the minimum $0.10 you suggested at max voting power so we wouldn't be able to encurage newbies to move outside their blogs and engage with others in contests or general chitchat.

On a personal note, Thank You for your witness Q&A responses to my teammate @mellofello. He is offline at the moment due to life changes in the real world. I wanted to thank you for your answers. The real life is just as busy for me at the moment. We will find time to get those answers out to the newbies in our community. Finding time to write is the challenging part!

@mejustandrew | April 15, 2018, 9:29 p.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

Exactly my thoughts, I believe it is important to remember that most of the traffic and the huge number of transactions that Steem is processing is due to minnows who are a lot and who a posting and interacting much, trying to get noticed there. Without them, this will not be possible:

[IMAGE: https://steemitimages.com/DQmR2NbsGq9G7J7pwcE1sDTnn7t5za2hfWLvKrVzauLDFUe/image.png]

And the value of Steem will not be the same. This kind of threshold removes their chance on this blockchain, more morally than financial...

@beeyou | April 15, 2018, 9:40 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Thank you for the snapshot @mejustandrew.

If I may point out, Asher (@abh12345) has a Curation and Engagement leagues he does weekly highlighting the engagement done weekly by the 300+ steemians entered in his leagues. His post receives a minimum of 200+ comments a week (last one was 465 comments made!), and many of the engagement action are made by redfish and minnows. Some find the community aspect of steemit the reason to continue blogging/engaging with others despite their pitiful earnings.

I understand Tim throwing this idea out there to combat spam. It is an idea afterall and is subjective to agreement or not by the mass. I appreciate that he is asking everyone for their thoughts because change has to start somewhere.

@mejustandrew | April 15, 2018, 9:49 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Indeed, the transparency and the involvement of the community in the decisions regarding the future of this platform are essential things which stay at the core of Steem, and this proposal debated publicly here by @timcliff is the perfect example that this blockchain is running healthy. His proposal has a completely correct intention, but the side effects, as you pointed out too could be devastating.

Earlier today I decided that I need to get involved more with small minnows and help them grow in order to increase together the value of Steem, as I concluded that they are the foundation which gives a big value to this blockchain. Curation projects as the one you highlighted above are perfect and we all need to interact more, to create here a better social network than any other one. After all, considering censorship resistance and decentralization of this blockchain provide the means to do so!

@beeyou | April 15, 2018, 11:30 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

We hold the same values with the #newbieresteemday initiative. A lot of our members are other redfish and minnows, with the simple intention of helping newbies as they are starting on here. That is great you will be more involved with small minnows.

I also read your comments up above. Excellent points!

@akomoajong | April 15, 2018, 8:43 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Increasing the payout threshold might harm minnows a lot. I think minnows mainly spam by commenting links to their posts that don't get recognition and those who use bots and trails spam by posting a lot of shitty content knowing that they will end a lot.

@adenijiadeshina | April 15, 2018, 8:43 p.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

You are perfectly right with your post @timcliff.
I can make myself as an example, when i first joined this steemit platform, i never knew any thing about this spamming of a thing so i was been flagged on several occasion till when my reputation goes down and not until a guy explain all to me.

So i would like to make some contribution also that people does not read the introduction write by the steemit platform when starting as that is my case.
Also like you said that there is a small chance of earning rewards, so if there is any way the reward system can be increased like you said, it may help in bringing down the rate of spaming in the blockchain.

Thank you for sharing this wonderful write up with us

@everittdmickey | April 15, 2018, 8:43 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

agreed.
and raise the amount needed to send wallet memos

@timcliff | April 15, 2018, 8:52 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Raising the amount may cause other issues (since sometimes those memos are used for legitimate purposes like exchanges), but this may help: https://github.com/steemit/condenser/issues/2728

@mejustandrew | April 15, 2018, 8:46 p.m. | Votes: 20 | [ VOTE ]

>### Do you think it will help with spam?

Yes, it will remove span once for ever, there will be just some bots that were left alone to spam because their owners did not took the time to turn them off, but indeed, that will stop spam. I got a more important question, socially speaking:

Do we really want this?

Let me share a short story:

When I joined Steem for the first time, there were a lot of things to learn, and I was not that fast with them, considering my limited time. As a newbie without any follower, I struggled so hard to get noticed, since my posts were completely invisible and nobody knew or wanted to talk to me. So I relied on the only thing that seemed profitable and okay to do: I started to spam. Comments like "Great post", "Nice cat" and so, brought me a little pennies that motivated me to continue to be active on this blockchain and with time I realized that it was not okay what I was doing and I stopped. Then with time, I convinced more people not to do this.

The moral of the story is more than obvious: If we stop the small rewards that people get from commenting, we may lose more people than we currently lose, and this is a thing that we must avoid. I have written about this previously and I still consider that one of the most important values of Steem is activity and traffic. Without that, Steem will never be as successful as it is today, processing that huge amount of transactions.

My personal belief is that before trying to fight spam which we still could do as a community using our flags and educating the spammers, we should focus more on the user retention, activity and good content discovery. When we will have these problems addressed, including bandwidth which demotivates newbies also, then I guess we will be ready to come back at disabling small rewards in order to fight spam, unless the community can not succeed to educate spammers.

As a second argument against this approach, is the fact that there are a lot of minnows who's posts are not worth more than $0.10. How that people would feel when in the 7'th day they will see that they do not get anything on their hard work and underrated and underviewed posts? This favors centralization of the Stake to the same big people who are able to make real money. Not to mention that if we put the trigger at 1$, only dolphins and whales will get some rewards.

I really hope that you don't mind, and that you will take a look at my sincere words right here.

What do you all think?

EDIT: @tarazkp came with the following idea:

>Just throwing ideas... What if it was 'payment withheld' for the first few months like a trial period until someone passes muster (doesn't get flagged all the time as Spam).

Which basically means applying the increased threshold that you want to make, but after some time (like a few months I believe) from the moment that a new user made his account. This would be a better idea, but still, I don't think that this is the way to go, at least for the moment. As I said above, there are much important aspects to address and we should start with that and postpone as much as we can this kind of decisions which could affect the user-base of Steem.

@solar | April 16, 2018, 4:52 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

I agree, and have written about this recently on my blog. I think steem needs to put more effort into hiring curators with delegation. --like a much more serious initiative, traditional media feels less robotic... Cause they have real people curating as much as their fancy algos. And steem doesnt have fancy algos, so it needs people all the more.

@mejustandrew | April 16, 2018, 5:06 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

With time the curators number has increased and it will continue increasing as the number of users on the platform also increases. I really believe that curation projects have evolved a lot and that they will keep evolving. You have got a nice point here!

@krischik | April 20, 2018, 3:10 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

> will continue increasing as the number of users on the platform also increases

Not sure. A plankton vote is mostly worth less then a Ȿ 0.005 — you can't be a curator before you are minnow. You would need look at minnows to make a prediction on new curators.

@mejustandrew | April 20, 2018, 3:28 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Indeed, but I didn't said that plankton will be curators. And yet, you don't need over 500 SP to upvote and earn curation rewards. I am more than sure that even less than 100 SP can still bring curation rewards and most likely that even under 50 SP, for a pretty good or lucky curator can also bring curation rewards.

On the other hand, as the number of users increases, the demand for curators will increase and most likely their number will increase. This is what I believe.

@krischik | April 20, 2018, 3:48 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

When I started I did make some in curation rewards. Then it dropped, had none for almost a month and as I just saw it's picking up again. Of course they are all absolute minimum Ȿ0.001:

https://gateway.ipfs.io/ipfs/QmY8ofe9xifeiSxzWMaePB9F9czfA2gKzMZNn2vt9V142Z

But even that make me happy as it's more then 0. The motivation of even the smallest payment is important.

@mejustandrew | April 20, 2018, 4:51 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

The curation rewards that you received were higher than usual because the price of Steem was pretty high => your vote was worth more. When the price of Steem got down, your vote got lower value which also reduced the curation rewards that you got. Now the price of Steem is rising again, which is a great thing!

@rentmoney | April 16, 2018, 9:41 p.m. | Votes: 9 | [ VOTE ]

A min cashout on post is not what is needed. Minnows / new members have a hard enough time growing on this platform as it is. If everyone wants this place to become more popular and have the whole community against spamming then something needs to be done about the vote values of all members. ONE steemians vote should not be worth more the 100's of other steemians vote's combined. This discourages new members once they sign up and after a week or two (if they last that long ) they give up or in some cases find another way to grow their account ( spamming ).

Another thing that stops this place from growing is the length of time it takes to make a free account. I waited over two weeks before being approved. I bet thousands signed up for an account here and because it took so long for them to get a response, they either completely forgot about this place or their acceptance email got lost among what-ever junk mail they may receive.

Find a solution to the above and watch this place grow, while at the same time the spamming issue will become more frowned upon. Allot don't mind it at present time due to the fact it's the way allot gravitate to so they can grow on this platform.

@rentmoney | April 17, 2018, 3:19 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

I think the gentlebot has a sense of humor considering it's upvote was worth exactly $1.00.

@omitaylor | April 19, 2018, 4:24 a.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

Great points. To add on to this here, every new user here trying the platform, learning it, and using it aren't all broke — even if they don't come with their investment in hand. Perhaps they want to see what it is like at the bottom first and what their hard work is worth. Usually, that is most telling. You know who your friends are when people care about you BEFORE you have something to offer them. And you can know how a system functions by the happiness of the lowest caste.

@rentmoney | April 19, 2018, 1:25 p.m. | Votes: 3 | [ VOTE ]

Exactly plus we will have the ones that want to build from nothing. What some whales seem to be forgetting is all the SP on Steemit is no good to them if all the minnows get fed up and leave this platform. Steemit needs minnows.

@krischik | April 20, 2018, 3:04 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

We talked about the plankton part before. You know what might be helpful to show the orcas and whales?

A statistic on how many plankton become minnows each month.

A statistic on new accounts is misleading. As is a statistic on registered users.

Engaged user is far more important. And making it past that plankton ⇒ minnows hurdle might be a good indication on how well the platform performs.

@rentmoney | April 20, 2018, 3:58 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

I think the percentages will show a large amount of sign ups leave the platform. A whale could always create a new account and start from scratch with no help from it's whale account or whale friends to see how hard it is to grow as a plankton / minnow.

@angelacs | April 20, 2018, 8:57 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

>A min cashout on post is not what is needed. Minnows / new members have a hard enough time growing on this platform as it is.

Exactly!

@sorin.cristescu | April 17, 2018, 6:52 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Guys, in case you've forgotten, I stumbled upon a post resteemed by @jesta a few months ago which showcases an elegant mathematical solution to the spam issue, from @scipio:

https://steemit.com/utopian-io/@scipio/how-to-solve-spam-on-steem-introducing-userauthority

@beggars | April 15, 2018, 8:48 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

As a relatively new member of Steemit, I am all for new ways to reduce the spam problem, but if I am understanding you correctly, your suggestion to increase the threshold would affect new users the most (and not in a good way).

I joined in January 2018 and only now in mid April 2018 am I starting to get somewhere. It has been a hard road for me, posting a tonne of content and earning usually just pennies. With these changes, I would probably still be struggling and not even earning pennies.

I am about to post my Steemit spam proposal on my blog here as well, something needs to be done, but it needs to be done in a way that Minnows don't get negatively affected.

Tim when you get a moment, I would love your thoughts and feedback on my proposal: https://steemit.com/steemit/@beggars/my-Proposal-To-Reduce-Spam-on-Steemit-and-reward-policing - I've been stewing on this for a few days myself (great minds think alike).

@enjar | April 15, 2018, 8:55 p.m. | Votes: 3 | [ VOTE ]

I really wish it was only 10% of the time they were getting rewarded last time I read about it, it was much higher. While the post Analyzing 'spam' is now a 2 months old it does go into some detail about rewards.

While I understand your desire to kill off spam this is killing off engagement for the little guy when it comes to comments. If someone writes me a decent comment it would be pointless to reward them under this new system. Most that I know consider upvoting comments with 10-20% vote at most. While you might not think it’s a large threshold it is for new users. This also makes curtailing my own comment sections to do my best to have great stuff at the top also pointless as I’m just tossing voting power out of the window than. As a result spam would be first comment on far more blogs forcing people to downvote instead of rewarding the good stuff if you are a little guy.

What’s the different between YouTube and Steemit? Our comment sections are not as toxic and we also don’t give the little guy the middle finger with “sorry you don’t meet the minimum thresholds to be paid here.”

This is not addressing the larger issue and that is the UTTER FAILURE TO NOT LET THEM IN. Sorry but the network is not protecting itself in any way or shape. People have pointed out number of times spammers just create username1-1000’s and all they do is change the number at the end. That is pathetic they could evade whatever “protection” the network has. Such proof can be found in post like Steemit creates accounts for scammers?

I consider my comments to be ok. According to steem.supply comments are 24.4% of my projected weekly earning at a whopping $6 worth (I’ve had a good week so far and comments are not 50% or greater of my rewards.) Maybe 1/6 of that under your new system would be reward now. I don’t go around spamming the platform with “nice post,” I don’ think people should be forced to buy comments upvotes just to get them reward because they lack the means to do so with their own voting power.

There got to be a better way to reject spam by the network than to just punish everyone because of a couple of bad apples. It would not shock me if just a handful of people are running these spam bots.

I can think of a lot of places like that try and reward engagement by tossing out upvotes that are far under your proposed thresholds. You are not just killing off spam with something like this it would be hurting places trying to foster and have conversion. @abh12345 @denmarkguy @hanshotfirst

@abh12345 | April 17, 2018, 10:12 p.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

For me it depends which Spam is the focus - is it down to Blockchain bloat or rewards?

All these dust accounts use space, but earn nothing compared to the alt-spam accounts being used by larger accounts just to reward themselves a little less obviously.

I'm for knocking a bit off payouts, perhaps even to the negative as @miniature-tiger suggests - that would help reduce space usage perhaps, but not the also sizable issue of larger accounts doing the old 1 sock 2 sock 3 sockpuppet routine.

@stimialiti | April 15, 2018, 8:55 p.m. | Votes: 6 | [ VOTE ]

>Currently if a post/comment earns 0.001 to 0.019 SBD worth of rewards - this is rounded down to 0.00. If a post/comment earns at least 0.02 SBD - then they receive their reward.

>If we increased this threshold up to 0.10 SBD, or even 0.25 or 1.00 SBD - then posts/comments that did not receive sufficient votes to pass this threshold would receive zero payout. This would likely decrease the incentive for users to create spam.

Wrong.
With bidbots you can increase this threshold to 1$, and it can still be b/reached.
The only answer is deletions once a certain ratio of the witnesses agree.
And scams should not get a favorable treatment over spam.

@profitbot | April 16, 2018, 9:11 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

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@youtake | April 16, 2018, 9:57 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

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@greengrowth | April 16, 2018, 11:21 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

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@whalecreator | April 18, 2018, 3:58 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

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@christianyocte | April 15, 2018, 8:59 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

When I started steemit, I actually have problems with my bandwidth. It was because I wanted to engage so much to the community and comment in the post people make in the platform. It was headache, it was a mess. But it teaches me lessons.
1. It teaches me discipline. The experience of having a very short bandwidth because of a very little SP that time, makes me use the number of my transactions wisely. I make sure that I do not waste my bandwidth.

  1. It teaches me patience. There was a time when I was really about to post something but it was not accepted due to short bandwidth. So, I waited a little longer until my post was accepted. What I am saying here is I have put in my mind that the transactions I do here is limited.

Therefore, my thoughts about this is that there should be limitations in the number of comments we do per day to eradicate the problems about spamming. Even if it sounds stupid for people who have invested so much in their Steem Powers, i still look at it as a good solution to the problem. The Steem Power can be used mainly in curation, for a more happy community.

Yes, I admit thay I know very little about the technicalities of the steemit platform but I think that limiting the number of our comments per day can help solve spamming. However, those having good intentions of commenting with value and sense would be affected.

One of these people who are affected with my thoughts are the newbies who need to be noticed in the community to grow.

I believe that my comments when I was still starting helped me big time to raise my reputation and my earnings before. I actually do not have bandwidth problems compared when I was just starting.

Thanks for reading tho. :) Im really trying to speak my thoughts in here though it is kinda difficult for me...

@miniature-tiger | April 15, 2018, 9:18 p.m. | Votes: 7 | [ VOTE ]

Change the minimum potential payout for a post from zero to a small negative number. A post or comment starts at zero as currently but a flagged post will receive -0.02 or -0.05 payout.

The negative payout could be deducted from wallets (controversial and potentially tricky legally no doubt) or built up into a debt which is deducted from any future positive payouts. Spammers will get less than nothing, making the practice uneconomical. Minnows will be unaffected.

As an alternative, give users a set number of posts and comments per day (5 posts and 20 comments for example) with the possibility to purchase more from a central market for a small fee. Alternatively an additional free comment could be awarded for each comment that makes a certain small level of payout.

@wilfredn | April 15, 2018, 10:35 p.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

I think the first idea is great. This will actually impose a cost on spammers. In my comment, I outlined why this measure doesn't really impose a cost on proficient spammers.

Not sure if it's possible to impose negative rewards that takes away from one's wallet though.

@miniature-tiger | April 15, 2018, 11:14 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Thanks @wilfredn!

When I've looked at spam accounts before in analyses, the majority do tend to shut down once their potential return falls to zero. No doubt they start up again with a new account but that's a different problem to solve.

Another option (bouncing off the ideas in your comment) is to reduce the delegated SP or bandwidth as the debt builds up, so spammers spam themselves into submission.

To prevent free speech suppression it could be made possible for other users to remove a user's debt using upvotes. The amounts of potential debt would only be small, unless the user is producing vast numbers of flagged comments.

@wholeself-in | April 16, 2018, 2:33 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

This is a brilliant idea, and if the negative payouts reduced a spammer's SP that would reduce the power of mass produced spammers that have their SP delegated from a main account.

@shredz7 | April 16, 2018, 12:17 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

They should take away from the user's Steem Power, because spammers could easily avoid this by not having any SBD or Steem in their wallet, but Steem Power is required to have bandwidth.

@tarazkp | April 15, 2018, 11:08 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

>or built up into a debt which is deducted from any future positive payouts.

This should work for this idea as spam accounts will never get out of debt.

@miniature-tiger | April 15, 2018, 11:30 p.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

I think so. It would be a question of calibrating the negative amount so that it takes away the thin margins on which spammers operate, without allowing any serious impact or abuse from flag wars. Even -0.01 might be enough to deter spammers, who would quickly rack up dollars of debt. Whilst a flag war with far fewer posts would still be only be cents at worst.

@tarazkp | April 15, 2018, 11:41 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

It is at least worth an experiment isn't it?

@mejustandrew | April 16, 2018, 4:57 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Many people writing normal comments won't get out of debt. Imagine some minnows interacting on this social-network, they will lose money with each comment they are making to each other. Where this will lead?

@miniature-tiger | April 16, 2018, 8:08 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Not under the (first) approach I put forward. Minnows won't have any debt. All comments start at zero. You will only build up a debt if you start getting a very large number of flagged comments. Minnows writing normal comments won't be affected.

@omitaylor | April 19, 2018, 4:47 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

That theory could possibly help a great deal and some help is better than no help.

@omitaylor | April 19, 2018, 4:51 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

@timcliff have you seen the idea posted by @minature-tiger? What would you say this would do on a broader scale (you know the code better than others.)

@anarchyhasnogods | April 15, 2018, 9:29 p.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

how about you make real comments valuable first. All this does is take more power away from new users, making them less likely to stay on the platform. I would rather have new users + spam over no new users and no spam.

@timcliff | April 15, 2018, 9:38 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

How so?

@indigoocean | April 15, 2018, 9:46 p.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

I'll go over my thought process below, but bottom line, no matter how I look at it, I just don't see a way of using payout minimums to stop spammers without also stopping new people who can't buy SP from using the platform legitimately.

A better approach seems the one SteemPlus is using, where they mark people as human, bot, or spammer. Once that classification system has enough data to be reliable the penalty for being marked a spammer could be to simply hide all your posts automatically, so that no one can even waste an upvote on them.

MY THINKIING
It's helpful to separate the discussion of posts vs comments. The goal is to fight spammers without penalizing newbies who can't afford to buy SP, so are working off the free delegation for the months it takes to grow that.

COMMENTS - If we look at the comments on this post, which has a number of high SP Steemians interacting, we see that not all the comments on here would get a payout at even the .10 threshold. Yet all but one of the comments I've read are clearly not spammers. If we increase the threshold to .25 we see that almost none of the comments on even this "well-healed" post would receive payouts. It looks like a handful that would.

We can anticipate that comments on the posts of newbies, the people who must desperately need to build an audience of readers and commentators, would receive even less because the people reading them tend to be other newbies. Asking someone to get 10 upvotes on a comment before they can expect a payout is like saying "don't expect to make anything on your comments unless you only read Whales or at least Dolphins."

The vast majority of comments on my posts get only my upvote. And I don't want to have to use a 100% weight upvote on every comment just to get the person paid something, which is about what I'd need to do given my current SP to meet even a .10 threshold.

So basically, I don't like the idea of raising the payout threshold for comments just to try to thwart spammers. I'd like to use a method that doesn't destroy the earning potential of newbies, either for commenting themselves or rewarding those who comment on their posts.

POSTS - Here I don't as much mind a threshold of some amount, because the person first has to get people subscribed to them. To do that they probably need to post something of quality somewhere at least some of the time. And only their own followers will see their posts. (Well unless they have money for bidbots and if they do, none of these 'payment threshold' approaches are going to stop them.)

So to say that a post needs at least .05 to payout seem reasonable to me. Basically you have to get at least 5 people who have a penny upvote to upvote your post. Since most newbies don't even have a penny upvote right now and it takes 2-3 of them to reward a penny, that effectively means that 10-15 other newbies have to upvote your post with 100% voting power for you to get anything.

It's still a tall order for many people I know. I see often people write very good posts, but only get 2-3 upvotes. So for posts also, this is not the way IMHO.

edit: I came across an example after leaving this comment that I think really makes my case on the posts issue. Here is a post from someone who's been consistently writing quality posts and leaving quality comments for about 4 months now, @eugenekul. I think this is a very high quality post, but before I upvoted it it had only .04 on it. If you look at his blog list, you'll see that most of his posts get less than .10, yet I think he is very much the kind of writer we want to see on Steemit, but clearly he can't afford to buy SP or even buy delegated SP. He is one of several examples I see that convince me that it would be best not to erect barriers to keep out spammers that really just keep out poor writers.

@beeyou | April 15, 2018, 11:44 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

>It's helpful to separate the discussion of posts vs comments....So to say that a post needs at least .05 to payout seem reasonable to me.

Very reasonable suggestion!

>The vast majority of comments on my posts get only my upvote. And I don't want to have to use a 100% weight upvote on every comment just to get the person paid something, which is about what I'd need to do given my current SP to meet even a .10 threshold.

Yes, I understand the thought here too and it is very true. Reaching that 0.10 threshold on comments for many users, especially for newbies, is extremely difficult.

@markkujantunen | April 15, 2018, 9:47 p.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

There is an easy way around that: vote buying. Just buy what's needed to get over any threshold used. Do we need any more vote buying on this platform?

@timcliff | April 15, 2018, 10:39 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

If users were doing that, then there would be more money "at risk" if they got downvoted.

@markkujantunen | April 16, 2018, 2:32 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Users are at a very low risk of being flagged for vote buying now. If the practice was practically a must for every newbie, then a flagging campaign against vote buyers would kill platform growth. As the valuation of STEEM is entirely based on expectation of future growth and advertising and promotion income in the distant future, the cessation of growth would kill the platform.

@timcliff | April 16, 2018, 2:50 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

It is a bit of a speculation to go that far, but I see your point.

@jlalvarez | April 15, 2018, 10:04 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

It's great to get some new knowledge, and it's very important to learn more about that threshold in which the publication is kept alive, and what can be done in that period of time ...

I feel there are more things to discover from the platform, thanks for the contribution and I am more nerdy @timcliff

@talesfrmthecrypt | April 15, 2018, 10:15 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Firstly I’d agree with the majority of the comments that state that the proposed change would hurt minnows.
As for the idea of withholding funds earned for a period of time, I think long term it wouldn’t make a difference. The biggest and most successful spammers are carrying out their operations using dozens if not hundreds of different accounts. All they would need do is wait for the said period to end and then they are free to spam again. Seeing as these individuals are creating accounts on such a frequent basis, the whole process of account creation - waiting for restrictions on funds to lift - spamming, would only need to complete once for them to have a steady stream of revenue again.
Most of the ideas on here are very much from the “stick” end of the solution. Where are the “carrots”? How about some onboarding for newbies? An arm around the shoulder to help them get started and know what is acceptable and what’s not? Steemit already produces those badges for certain achievements. Perhaps an enhanced version of those for new users who are playing by the rules? If these were visible on a new users account for a certain period then it would almost act as a verification of them as a genuine community member. I think it’s worth remembering that not all new users spam!

@wilfredn | April 15, 2018, 10:31 p.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

We also have to consider how spammers will optimize their operations to get around this limit.

> There is little cost to adding spam to the blockchain.

True. At the moment, it's cost free to create accounts via steam, and spamming allows a spammer to earn either through random upvotes given by users, abuse of upvote bots, or circle upvotes - in fact, the more accounts they create, the higher the rewards because each Steemit-created account has a total active SP of at least 15.

In other words, it's a cost-free venture (disregarding server and time costs for running a large ring of accounts), with the chance of reaping rewards. Profit is guaranted to be non-negative.

But will raising the threshold impose a cost?

Not really. There's no direct monetary cost imposed, and only an "economic cost" from less expected profit. The outcome will be less expected profit per account and spam post/comment, but it's still non-zero. The time cost for a true spammer who uses computer programs is close to 0 once there is some system set down.

If I were a spammer, I would get around this by creating more accounts to put out more posts so I hit my target return, reap more self-upvotes to get over the limit, or simply use upvote bots to hit the minimum required.

i.e. The spammers will optimize their operations to get around this limit easily.

Spammers will hardly be affected. The true cost will fall upon new joiners and low SP holders.

@smooth | April 15, 2018, 10:53 p.m. | Votes: 5 | [ VOTE ]

I prefer deducting a small amount from the each reward. Of course if the resulting payout ends up below zero (or probably still below some dust threshold defined for technical reasons), then the reward would not be paid.

This has the advantage that it can't be trivially circumvented by buying a "top off" vote from a bot (adding even more bloat to the blockchain) and it also better recovers the "costs" of adding content to the blockchain. Finally it is arguably more fair to stakeholders of all sizes, since all must incur the cost. With just a minimum payout threshold, a stakeholder with enough SP to exceed the threshold on his or her own incurs zero cost from it. This is vaguely similar to the situation with n^2 where whales with sufficient SP could reach the very superlinear portion of the reward curve on their own and monopolize influence, while smaller stakeholders could not.

I believe something like this is scheduled for HF20 but I don't recall if the per-content deduction was implement or just the per-vote deduction (the later replaces the minimum dust vote threshold and discourages spam voting in addition to spam content).

One last thought. I believe that an actual 'cost' in the form of a reward deduction (which isn't eliminated once the post reaches a threshold and can't be circumvented) would likely be more effective than a threshold. Therefore to accomplish the same degree of spam control, it could be smaller, all else being equal, and direct impacting small SP holders less. I don't know this for sure, it is just an opinion. Could be wrong.

@timcliff | April 15, 2018, 11:09 p.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

I agree, that is probably a better way to implement it.

The change that was implemented for HF 20 subtracts a small amount from the individual votes. This is very similar to what you are suggesting, although at the level that they are implementing it - it is probably too low to make any significant difference with spam.

https://github.com/steemit/steem/issues/1764
https://github.com/steemit/steem/pull/1934

@smooth | April 15, 2018, 11:53 p.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

It shifts the incentive for people with swarms of small accounts to delegate to either one voting account or a paid delegation service rather than have each account vote with a bot. That may not affect content spam but it does reduce vote spam (in the case of delegating to a paid service, it may even reduce content spam, with many variables). Although for people with small accounts receiving delegation, they won't be able to do that (since redelegation isn't possible), so the problem persists. At least in that case a possible solution is getting the delegation removed.

@codypanama | April 16, 2018, 12:54 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Hello @smooth I recently became aware of huge issues with fake accounts going back to day 1. I see now that many good people are aware of this and trying to implement corrective measures. @anonymint pointed me in your direction. Is there some off chain area where info is posted? Like who are the good guys VS the bad? I would like to at least use my witness votes correctly. Bad actors from day 1 still have immense control and power here.
Nuff said here and now, Thanks for your time.

@smooth | April 17, 2018, 6:01 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

I don't know of a specific resource to suggest. Be engaged both on the site and on steem.chat, learn, and reach your own conclusions about "good guys VS bad". This is not an easy problem with a cookie cutter solution.

@sircork | April 18, 2018, 6:45 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

This could be taken to @anyx, @patrice, and company at http://steemcleaners.org for reporting, but they have to chose their battles by severity and applicability to their mission to fight spam and bot rings. But it's a resource to at least consider. There is also #abuse I think it's called, on http://steem.chat but that's a pretty noisy channel.

@glenalbrethsen | April 19, 2018, 4:17 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Finally! Someone who mentioned HF 20. I'm including a screenshot of the two paragraphs from the late December update by steemitblog that address the changes that are set to occur when HF 20 drops. It not only talks about a 1.219 shift down of SP, but the elimination of the dust threshold.

It also says that basically powerless votes will have no impact on the blockchain, just I presume, as it is now. Just that the user will be able to vote to their hearts content.

[IMAGE: https://steemitimages.com/DQmR3sJT8i43oerLq4DH4zUv3hgEN8mqJKLjPqyVwL1EAKM/Screen%20Shot%202018-04-19%20at%209.02.50%20AM.png]

So, if this is still happening, and the dust threshold is eliminated, how can it be raised (this question is for you or @timcliff or anyone else that can answer it) if it doesn't exist? And wouldn't this and the idea of raising a non-existent dust threshold be working at cross purposes, if a no defunct dust threshold could be raised?

Please excuse my confusion. Maybe the problem is the terminology being used, ie, dust threshold, has two different meanings here: one affecting the ability to vote, the other affecting if someone can be paid. As it is, I think both are addressed in the screenshot above, so I'm still not sure how this raised dust threshold is supposed to work. Add in the SP shiftdown, and I'm even less sure.

@smooth | April 19, 2018, 11:08 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

AFAIK that vote shift stuff is still in the HF20 development code.

On the topic of dust votes and dust rewards (as well as this post), there are two different issues, one concerns individual (very small) votes and the other individual (very small) reward payouts. I'm not aware of any already-implemented changes to the dust rules for reward payouts in HF20, only for dust votes.

@glenalbrethsen | April 20, 2018, 12:10 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Okay, that's the distinction I was missing dust votes vs dust payout. Thank you for clearing up my confusion. I really do appreciate it.

@enjar | April 16, 2018, 12:24 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Better Auditing Process

Spam comments

Let’s assume a user does post 10,000 comment months and it’s just the same message. Is there a reason why Steemit cannot do a weekly/daily audit to find this in their own database and pull 100% of their delegation to those accounts? Spammers will always find a way around things but if they are having there delegation pulled so they are sitting at 0 SP or let’s say .01 how often are they going be able to use the network? They will have to invest to be able to keep up their operations or be very hinder greatly won’t they?

Assuming they do this daily and eventually they have hardened the sign up process to cut down on how many accounts a day these people get to make.

Same named accounts

If the users can find them I would assume someone who understand how to do quarry searching in the database could find Account1 Account2, Account3 and silly named things like that.

Again, why should they get to have delegation from Steemit? It should be rather clear one there 10’s to 100’s of them that something not right here and the system should not be supporting whatever they are up to with delegtion.

Upvoting

If an account never makes any blogs or comments is there any reason they should be getting to continue to use the delegation they get from Steemit? It seems odd if they are not producing anything that they should just get to keep free SP to use as they wish. I think of many 500-1k upvote botchains out there that only do one thing and if they had no SP that make them worthless.

Other types of spam

One strange thing I’ve seen with a lot of new accounts. First thing they do is go out and spam follow 1000’s of accounts. What kind of impact does this have on overall ecosystem if in terms of resources used to facilitate these massive feeds they are getting from following all these people? Does it not make more sense to limit accounts under 500 SP to 500 people they can follow?

If I think of scalability this seems to be a possible issues down the road is it not for the servers? I start to wonder when we one day see 10 million accounts what this will do if someone is following 1 million people themselves while only having starting SP delegated to them by Steemit.

@timcliff | April 16, 2018, 2:43 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

> Steemit cannot do a weekly/daily audit to find this in their own database and pull 100% of their delegation to those accounts?

The example of 10,000 comments that are exactly the same was a little bit over-simplified. A lot of the spammers are doing it in a way that is not very easy to detect. A lot of the spam is in a 'gray area' that does not necessarily warrant getting their delegated SP taken away. The real question is - are the comments people are making actually adding value?

> Same named accounts

There is another thread on this within the post. I replied to that there.

> Upvoting

That is an arbitrary requirement. What about users who just want to view content and curate?

> One strange thing I’ve seen with a lot of new accounts. First thing they do is go out and spam follow 1000’s of accounts.

Agreed, it would probably be good to put some form of limit on this, but as far as blockchain resources - this operation actually causes very little "bloat". It is a pretty small problem compared to the resources that spam comments take up.

@enjar | April 16, 2018, 4:10 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Are the comments people are making actually adding value?

The big thing I see is a collective value overall or just an individual value to one person. Most comments to tend to be geared towards adding value to the person they are interacting with. If someone makes a blog and the only person to reply to it is a “nice job” and author upvote it. Did they just add value in the eyes of that author who poured their soul and heart into something and only 1 person left a message? Well, we have our answer they upvote it. Now overall it could get downvoted by not adding value to another person to what it was upvoting to.

Other times you can have comments that try and build on or create further conversion. However, if no one engages with it, Did it add value overall to that blog in the first place? My answer would be no it failed to do so.

You have many people who will read a blog and then make a blog about it instead of leaving their comment in it. I could have done this; however, I doubt anyone would have read and left a comment on it. Even more so if someone did leave a wonderful comment it will get even fewer views than my blog. Since it was in my eyes a better way to add a value in leaving a comment here instead I did so.

Part of me would be fine with a comment daily limit. But I know those people who want to spam will just make more accounts. Which seems like it just is hurting legit users who find themselves in need going over the cap. Could an SP cap that unlocks more comments per day even be a thing? That at least not limit services that are dealing with spammers, phishing attempts, or trying find some other way in adding value to their copy/past messages.

I myself can only put out what I consider a couple of high quality comments a day. Sure I could make 100 comments in a single day but those rarely ever in my eyes add value.

Part of me wonders at what point are we going be dealing with so much bloat that comments with zero upvotes or further comments to them will just get purged from the system right before voting period closes.

Arbitrary requirement

You don’t need an account just to read things if you never plan to comment/blog in any way. How big is a single user curate impact with just the starting delegation amount? Sure I’ve seen people running around with 500-1k accounts upvoting a total of what $2-3.

The biggest issue here is people not in our ecosystem cannot reward people. So while I can see a reason someone would want create an account who never plans to comment/blog. I just find it strange if you are already logged into an account that you do not on occasion have something to say in the comment section below. In my eyes that ignoring a very key element here but I will admit I have a bias on this I leave a lot of comments. Perhaps there are far more people using account creation who are not engaging in any other way than a upvotingthat is ligament users than those taking advantage of the system.

Overall

I’m still hoping some kind of solution to limiting spammers bandwidth so they are unable to proceed is the answer. Unless a decentralized platform can shadowban users. But since they don’t really seem into banning accounts I’m not going hold my breath of some kind of shadowban mechanic. Even more so since those can be used to restrict freedom of speech.

Otherwise, I fear the negative impact having an increased threshold. If someone living in part of the world where they only need make $1 a day spamming they only need 1 good hit to accomplish their goal for that day. While I would hope anyone with that kind of upvote would not I somehow can see it happening enough.

If the threshold is 1$ any blog making less than that is going be hurting even more since it's doubtful any kind of engagement in comment sections will result in making that threshold.

If it's only .05 and we are going with the assumption that person only needs to make $1 than they only need 20 spam comments to be over this at most. As such I don't see that making any kind of meaningful impact of reducing spam.

Then we are left with the social/culture way people are communicating these days. One short dive into a youtube comment section or a look on twitter and people seem to be just leaving short “nice, great video, whatever.” In my mind, I don’t see that as creating value and as spam; while, others don’t view it as spam. Which seems to leave us to the point where individual users have to decide this and vote accordingly.

@enjar | April 16, 2018, 5:03 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

One question I do have is how much are spammers even making in a week? Does anyone even have a ballpark or data points for such thing? Is this even $500 a week issue outside of spammers doing voting circles that get hunted down by people like Spaminator?

We are assuming having a $1 threshold would even be doing more good than bad. Out side of the major abusers that land themselves on comment trending or surpass such a threshold anyways. Its hard to even know if such a dramatic measure is even worth.

I'm not even sure how someone would even try and find this out. I'm sure people with right skills can easily find out how many comments are under 1$ and that total per week is. Trying to determining how much of that is going to spammers I have no idea how they work that out.

You have any thoughts on this @paulag?

@timcliff | April 17, 2018, 1:24 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

@patrice may have some data on that.

@kubbyelizabeth | April 16, 2018, 12:44 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

The pro's and con's mentioned below are pretty much aligned with what I think as well. I would only add that its a balancing act. How can we do all three main points suggested. Increase the mini reward required before payout, add more manpower to check duplicate accounts, and improve the registration process?

Well, I think the witness could help brainstorm a script to help with this.

@mysearchisover | April 16, 2018, 1:16 a.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

I think we should lower the limit at least down to a penny if not more.

Steemit/steem fraud!!! I got robbed!!! :(

@timcliff | April 16, 2018, 2:45 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

I agree, it makes for a very bad UX. I opened an issue for it a while ago: https://github.com/steemit/condenser/issues/1819

@justtryme90 | April 16, 2018, 1:55 a.m. | Votes: 17 | [ VOTE ]

Tim, this is a terrible idea. Wanting to reduce spam is a noble goal, however doing that through limiting the potential for comment rewards doesn't seem like the right way to go about it (especially with your suggestion of 0.5 or even 1 SBD!). It may help discourage spam, but at the cost of also discouraging legitimate discussion and harming the future of the platform.

@timcliff | April 16, 2018, 2:49 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Well, just to play devil's advocate - let's say we set the threshold to 0.10. If a comment doesn't receive enough votes (either from a large stakeholder or several small ones) in order to reach a 0.10 payout - is it actually adding sufficient value to the network to warrant a payout?

@katerinaramm | April 16, 2018, 7:34 a.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

There are many legitimate reasons for commenting for a post or for a comment (like me, now) on steemit.

  • add one's opinion on the topic (this usually adds value to the post)
  • encourage the author of the post / comment
  • acknowledge or correct something in the post
  • offer help to a question (i.e. someone I don't know was asking for something in a comment, somewhere - and I replied to offer them answers)

There are times where comments can be more lengthy than the posts themselves!

In my opinion, there can be a character limit to avoid short sometimes meaningless comments.

We should focus in educating the users entering the platform and adding more support to them right from the beginning. (It took me 2 months to figure things out with loooots of search)

Also by making it easier for honest people who wish to join and cannot or need support and have to ask it through (non so legitimate) facebook groups (where everybody sells and buys fake accounts, sbds etc)

Dear @timcliff please do not get me wrong, I very much appreciate your efforts and work and you have also helped a friend of mine in the past...

But please, lets focus at

  • making steemit an inviting place - with easy to create accounts and great support to new members
  • making steemit a safe place
  • create a community around steemit that can support each other at whichever field we can

I am at your disposal if I could be of any assistance

@timcliff | April 16, 2018, 1:57 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Thanks :)

@maverickinvictus | April 19, 2018, 4:25 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

This is a great comment especially

>making steemit an inviting place - with easy to create accounts and great support to new members
making steemit a safe place
create a community around steemit that can support each other at whichever field we can

It is hard enough not worrying about will my post just turn to dust now and if it is raisedd even further it will just send the message without money you are a zero.

@beat-the-bookies | April 16, 2018, 7:45 a.m. | Votes: 9 | [ VOTE ]

Yes, it is.

The value of the network is in the social interactions that occur.

What you're proposing is for everybody but the bigger accounts to get rekt. The big accounts already see their farts going over the threshold, while the entire essays by the small fish can't get over 0.01 a lot of the time.

Basically, your position is that only the big fish provide the value to the network. The rest of us don't count.

With the rep of 72 and 56k in SP, your experience here on steemit is definitely something most of us don't experience. As a member of the steemit's fledgling sports betting community, I've seen a ton of conversation taking place where the total payout doesn't go over 0.10. The real people having the real conversation. That is the real value of the network in my opinion.

Setting the limit at 0.10 is equal to pissing on the small fish. Make an account that can't be traced back to you and join one of the smaller communities here, see how much the upvotes you're getting are worth.

With such a terrible retention and engagement rates this platform has, you want to make it even worse. Try to remember what it looks like to be a small fish just starting out. Yes, 0.10 and 0.01 makes no difference, but it counts. It's a feedback you get, it's a sign you're doing something right. And if you can't remember (if you were always a big player), try to imagine at least.

@timcliff | April 16, 2018, 1:59 p.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

Appreciate the feedback :)

@beat-the-bookies | April 16, 2018, 2:40 p.m. | Votes: 6 | [ VOTE ]

You're most welcome :-)

Sorry I took such an offensive tone. I've calmed down a bit after having a discussion with @tarazkp in the comments below.

The worth of the platform is in the number of real people having real discussions no matter their SP. What is the FB but a place where hundreds of millions of people are having discussions? Do their investors want fewer people on their platform? I think not.

I know, steemit is not the FB, but it isn't a knockoff of the medium.com either. Steemit is a different beast altogether, making it into medium or fb is a mistake in my mind.

Would you, as an investor, want to see a lot of real people creating real communities around their interest or a bunch of weak, artsy fartsy, attempts at writing by the second-rate authors (most of the medium.com)?

Of course, there are different schools of thoughts on what steemit is or should be. For some, it is just a prop for peddling STEEM/SBD. For them, a cheap knockoff of medium.com does the job.

I think that is the most shortsighted attitude towards this platform.

This thing can be huge, but the key to the platform's sustainability is the people that believe in it, the people that find it worth their while to invest their time and energy here.

The content is secondary in my opinion, it's all about the people. There are entire libraries of pirated books written by the most talented and intelligent humans that ever lived. You know how much people bothered to download them? You can count them on fingers. It's all about real people having the real conversations and meaningful discussions.

Spam is A problem (every platform has it), but engagement is THE problem this platform has. Cheers!

@jaki01 | April 17, 2018, 7:05 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Well said! The main value of facebook is generated by the huge number of interacting users (I don't like facebook, but that doesn't affect the statement above).

@omitaylor | April 19, 2018, 4 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Well said. I just got my Steem coffee mug and I just found out I can only vote at 100% once every 3 hours so my vote is not a lie - or else only vote on popular content. What a buzz kill.

@doctorclick | April 16, 2018, 3:32 p.m. | Votes: 3 | [ VOTE ]

As a relatively new user I can confirm this. In the beginning it is very hard to stay on track at steemit, because you are not very much seen in the first place and the UI is not very easy to use. I think it would be much better to think about ways to motivate and reward real people and make them contribute content than to get new barriers in place.

@ats-david | April 17, 2018, 5:28 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

>As a member of the steemit's fledgling sports betting community...

You should find me on Steem.chat or Discord. I may be able to help with that.

@beat-the-bookies | April 17, 2018, 5:44 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Just sent a DM to @ats-david [ats-witness] on discord.

EDIT: I've tried to contact you on steem.chat, but weren't able to. Anyhow, I'll drop a link on discord on something I'm thinking about doing in the near future. I would appreciate your feedback on it.

@mejustandrew | April 16, 2018, 8:38 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

0.10$ would mean 10 or even 20 minnows (new users, whatever) upvotes, at 100% Voting Power. If one does make 0.09$ by getting upvoted by 15 minnows, it will mean that its content is not worth anything, this is what you propose?

@timcliff | April 16, 2018, 2:03 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Well there is a perspective that they are not adding financial value to the platform. Will a conversation that is had between 15 minnows attract any new investors to the platform? Will it do anything to cause the price of STEEM to go up?

I am not trying to say that conversations among minnows are worthless, but I am asking you to think of it from an investor’s perspective.

Curious your thoughts.

@truthforce | April 16, 2018, 3:13 p.m. | Votes: 6 | [ VOTE ]

I think you need to separate a few things here.

  1. Users

  2. Investors

  3. SMT

Tons of minnows interacting with eachother causes the Alexa Site Ranking to go higher. Which shows up more in search results. Minnows and people with almost 0 steempower add a lot of value in views/shares/word of mouth to interest more people to come into steemit. What if you had almost no minnows and everyone was just a small dolphin up to a whale? Do you think any investors want to come to this platform and see a bunch of dolphins and whales upvoting eachother for absurd amounts of money?

Investors, who and what do they want? heh. I think a supar majority of the whales/dolphins/minnows here have never bought any steem, so I think this is more of a thing to focus on for the future.

Which leads into SMTs, this is what investors are going to come here for. Looking at how successful fund raising is for ERC20 tokens on Ethereum blockchain, that is what investors do/care about. I don't think that you can have any kind of success with SMTs if you only have a few thousand dolphins/whales on this platform(vs millions of minnows).

I would take millions of minnows all day everyday over a few thousand dolphins/whales. Investors would to. A few thousand people don't make steemit(or the steem blockchain), they just earn the majority of rewards.

I hope my reasoning makes sense in this regard. Just trying to say that investors won't care about a platform that doesn't have millionws or tens of millions of users(minnows). Minnows are largely users and they won't ever earn much, but they still have a lot of value in many other ways.

@mejustandrew | April 16, 2018, 3:14 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Thanks for your question, it is a good one indeed and I was actually waiting for it. Let me answer it with another question:

Does the over 2 billion users of Facebook bring any value to it?

Actually they do, and they make it one of the most successful social media of this world, and we all know that it is a lot of lame content over there and a lot of misinformation. But economically speaking, with an increased number of users, comes a greater value of the platform. There will be advertisers who will pay for their content to be seen, there will be companies that will want their product to reach this market and this society that we all represent, and it will come with an increase in the price of Steem. There were a lot of them who took advantage of this blockchain in order to increase their popularity, and I am sure that there will be more if the Steem user base increases. My personal belief is that Steemit Inc. should focus more on this type of income that could sustain both the company and the blockchain on the long term. If a SP delegation or upvote could increase one's visibility and considering how much are people paying for that, think about it more when the userbase of Steem will be ten times higher. Or one hunderd times higher. If you can visualize that, well it will be just 5% of what facebook has right now.

I hope I have answered your question and excuse me if my answer is not that complete or correct gramatically speaking, I am writing this comment on my phone, at work :)

@minismallholding | April 18, 2018, 11:14 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

That's debatable. In the real world the biggest proportion of the populous could be called minnows, yet they are the ones that keep the money engine running and pumping the money back up to the big companies at the top. Cut off that population and where are the companies?

@omitaylor | April 19, 2018, 4:10 a.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

I am a redfish (here). I invite you to see who follows me on Twitter at BRIX617 and on Facebook brix.boston. Then ask if it would attract investors.

That said, I would not dare invite my celebrity, ecommerce, and science friends here now knowing how some of the others have been so deeply criticized, attacked, and received. At least not at this point.

Investors aren't going to just drop a million of their own dollars into this and walk away. No, they're going to want to leverage their investment and use the platform much the way the likes of Jerry Banfield, Joe Parys, and others.

You never know who someone is OFF steemit or how much money they have in real life. Thats why it's wise to not let ones steem ego control every decision.

♥️

@timcliff | April 19, 2018, 3:27 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

What do you think are the main things keeping people from investing?

@omitaylor | April 19, 2018, 6:09 p.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

I can tell you what I've heard at masterminds and in a personal conversation about Steemit:

  • The social complexity makes it more complicated than other equally valuable blockchains.

  • A witness earns a few thousand per month. That's the top echelon here aside from whales, who can't power down. Money you can't power down is worthless.

  • It may be the first but it's not the only social blockchain. And the userbase is stuck on using it a way that inhibits evolution.

  • That it is laughable how egotistical and godlike many highly vested Steemians believe themselves to be. (A certain childish angry cat comes to mind lol)

  • People (mostly minnows) will demonize them and their brand for what the system allows them to do — which they have every right to do.

>Like I mentioned previously, Steemit.com is just one single domain interfacing with the blockchain. But it (and those who want it to stay centralized to Steemit.com and conforming to the Steemit only way of doing things) claim content and financial sovereignty over everyone's activities blockchain wide.

  • Those who use it like Joe Parys and Jerry Banfield, are smacked down by others for abusing the platform despite all the good they've done for it with what they earn. When this is observed, it turns people away fast

  • I can't go on the Litecoin blockchain and nullify your hashes with a massive downvote because I don't like how you use your money.

  • While the platform was built with their (capitalist business) mindset considered, it's no longer that — and they've missed the boat.

I've pondered some things myself as well.

If Cardi B released a multiplatinum single on this blockchain, and put it on the front page with her own money — with all the information we get when we sign up... Just imagine what would happen. Would she be asked for her copyright? Would there be an army of Steemians downvoting her music because they think she's a slut? Would she get hit with spam bots reminding her how spam and bots are dangerous to the blockchain— how hypocritical... why would I invite her into this?

Steemians want silent investors on a socialblockchain, with no real financial incentive over other investment opportunities that are more liquid— yet will not permit participation as a vested person. I.e. This is like mixing business and pleasure. And will even talk shit when you power down and leave.

In a way, it's like a crazy narcissistic girlfriend who believes she's amazing and like nobody can compete with her, when there's a sane girl already calling.

@timcliff | April 19, 2018, 6:50 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Interesting feedback, thanks.

@omitaylor | April 20, 2018, 2:28 a.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

For the record, I speak on Steemit regularly with people that I think might be down to earth enough to adapt to it. But even the instagram influencers I know, if they were to use Steepshot, would probably be considered spammers by Steemians for:
* Sole photos with too many tags and limited short captions and no copyright ownership information.
* Reposts without source information
etc.

I have only 2500 followers but I am actually close with about half. I could invite them with a Live to use Steepshot, and 500 people would probably sign up.

Yallapapi could too, he could probably go live and bring 1000 people to steepshot.

These are not really the kind of users steemit needs or wants though— even though most would be 1st world users.

I'm not ready to get the reputation (among my instagram friends) for that either when they get no engagement becase secretly unbeknowst to them, here on the dark-blockchain of steemit.com they're getting flagged.

Appics may be a better option, I'm waiting to see what happens.

As for wealthier friends, maybe Steemit could come up with some kind of business proposal for how they can use Steemit effectively for their brand.

And if bid bots and self voting is not allowed or will have massive consequences, then maybe it's time for the features to go or just for someone to come out and say tough shit- they're allowed, get used to it.

@timcliff | April 21, 2018, 2:19 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Good point regarding the type of posts.

> As for wealthier friends, maybe Steemit could come up with some kind of business proposal for how they can use Steemit effectively for their brand.

Any ideas?

> And if bid bots and self voting is not allowed or will have massive consequences, then maybe it's time for the features to go or just for someone to come out and say tough shit- they're allowed, get used to it.

They are allowed. Unless/until stakeholders start downvoting, they will continue.

@improv | May 1, 2018, 3:54 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Reading this thread... what do you mean investors? Do you mean people who will buy lots of Steem or do you mean folks who will pay the devs directly for advertisement posts? Or who will develop some other financial relationship with... whom? For... building tools that help them use blockchain data to...something? The idea of Steemit is decentralization, right? So I'm not sure what you want investors to do... unless it's just BUY steem.

And if it is, I think you DO want to develop the appeal for minnows. Right now you have folks who mostly are just trying it out for free. No risk, no money... because it's still in beta and relatively small. But the wider the adoption, the more it feels like something solid that's worth investing in because it's not going to disappear tomorrow.

It still feels like a teeny tiny project that made a few people very rich that a few more people are wiggling their toes in and getting happy about because they're early adopters (relatively). But once I meet someone IRL who is on it, and not because I told them about it... well, it's going to seem much bigger. And then I'm not going to be worried that it'll fizzle and die along with an investment.

The crypto world is a rollercoaster right now. If Steemit is in it for the long haul, it has to be more than that. And it is, but it doesn't seemed designed to be that way.

@timcliff | May 1, 2018, 9:55 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Investors = people that want to buy STEEM/SP. Good thoughts :)

@jaki01 | April 17, 2018, 6:55 a.m. | Votes: 4 | [ VOTE ]

I like to encourage the readers to comment my articles by granting their comments 1 % upvotes (depending on the STEEM price that's about 0.1 dollar). I would consider it as counterproductive to void these small upvotes.

Instead of that one could limit the number of posts + comments per day and user which are qualified to earn money (that would be an incentive to make 'good' comments instead of many). In my opinion it was a big mistake to increase the number of four fully rewarded posts per day and user to 'unlimited'.

@freebornangel | April 17, 2018, 5:08 p.m. | Votes: 6 | [ VOTE ]

If it receives a vote it deserves its reward.
There are ways to identify spammers that dont include making the game pointless to the majority of the nonpopular.

How about implementing downvotes for witnesses to get bad ones out?

@darth-azrael | April 17, 2018, 6:58 p.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

I tend to agree. Raising the threshold for payout will disincentivize new users/minnows which is definitely not what you want when you are trying to grow a platform and while there may be no short term financial harm in doing so, I think it will have a long term impact. There must be better ways to handle spam.

@freebornangel | April 17, 2018, 7:35 p.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

There are ways. Like reversing the hardfork that brought this on.
But selfvoting and vote selling are features, dont you know?

Imo, this is just a shot across the bow of the nonpopular speakers here.
Either start kissing whale ass or get demonetized.

@ats-david | April 17, 2018, 8:26 p.m. | Votes: 4 | [ VOTE ]

Well, to be fair...

You can’t really kiss much whale ass anymore. They have mostly disengaged or delegated their stake to bid bots and spammers. So, in order to be “seen,” the game now is to pay bid bot owners (who mostly don’t even have their own stake in the platform - which reduces accountability and, consequently, overall quality) or try to join one of the many collusive voting groups that pretend to be “communities.”

I’m not one to focus only on the money aspect (because I think expectations are way too high for new users), but the fact that the system in general has become a de facto pay-to-play scheme is the exact opposite of how Steem has been “advertised.” Right now, we seem to only be able to attract spammers, scammers, and the general refuse of social media pseudo-“celebrities.” This isn’t a sustainable growth model in the long-term, especially if actual competition arrives.

The disturbing part, however, is that the direction doesn’t seem to be changing, despite all of the problems. In fact, the current proposals from STINC are essentially doubling down on the stupidity. Their incompetence and the culture here has so far been protected by irrational crypto pumps. If it weren’t for these price pumps, the failures of “leadership” would be much more tangible and much less palatable.

@freebornangel | April 17, 2018, 8:49 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Yep, until they run out of bigger fools this is what we get.

Its very telling about the mindset at the helm.
Now they've had time to build an outer circle to insulate themselves from the unwashed.
Its sad what they have done.

We could've been well on our way to becoming the default cryptocurrency.
Instead we are wasting time being a scam coin because scammers are at the helm.
Smdh.

@minismallholding | April 18, 2018, 11:05 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

>How about implementing downvotes for witnesses to get bad ones out?

Thank you!

@freebornangel | April 18, 2018, 11:26 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Np.

@p-props | April 18, 2018, 4:10 p.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

I may be looking at this the wrong way but does the fact that you @timcliff are making almost 100 sbd a week by delegating to minnow booster make you apart of the problem as anyone can buy upvotes no matter how spammy their posts are? Don't hate me for asking but it seems a bit hypocritical.

@timcliff | April 19, 2018, 12:01 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

I do lease my SP to several users, but I have vetted them to ask what they plan to do with it, and I would remove the delegation if I found it wasn't being used in ways that benefit the platform.

@p-props | April 19, 2018, 9:09 a.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

Fair enough, it is in the best interests of us all to see the platform succeed and personally I'm not worried at all by the fact that we have a lot of spam earning a few cents here and there if it keeps those people engaged in the platform. Maybe when they have been here for a while and they realise that its in their best interests too for the platform to succeed they will try to improve their input and see the value beyond a quick buck. We are all on the same side.

@angelacs | April 20, 2018, 8:36 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

>If a comment doesn't receive enough votes (either from a large stakeholder or several small ones) in order to reach a 0.10 payout - is it actually adding sufficient value to the network to warrant a payout?

I'm only 69 days old on Steemit. So there's LOTS I do not know.
What I have already figured out, quite early in, I may add, is that unless someone has $$/SP in their account, or one/several benefactors who do, content posted sinks fast.

What I already know is that many red fishes post their hearts out publishing good content, get some $0.00 upvotes from a small growing fan base and their posts NEVER even reach $0.01.

Are you saying that in an environment such as this, the $$ value of a post is the ONLY indicator of it's 'true' value? That $0.00 upvoting by non-big fish community members, because it has no financial value, has no value at all?

I'm truly confused here. I truly felt Steemit was a place where there was hope to work hard, meet and greet other community members via comments and slowly advance without a lot of money.

Then I realized it's necessary to get to that 500 SP level fast. Fine. A good goal to work towards.

Now?

Small peeps adding to the good content pool that will forever keep Steemit's SEO value high, now can't even collect the little few cents they may miraculously earn without the help of bots... just several $0.00 and $0.01 upvotes adding together?

The 'real' world already lacks vision and compassion and says most of the 7+ billion on the planet have no 'value'. I don't need to be on a platform that makes it plain as day in policies that work against the little person. If the 'poor's' content has no value, then maybe the poor don't need to be publishing here.

We can all find some other way to express our gifts, passions, make money then find somewhere to invest our money.

All most of us are looking for is a place we can share our talents, build a base of followers and advance based on a system that's constantly evolving to support, not sabotage that.

@krischik | April 20, 2018, 2:45 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

> or several small ones

I have votes with 7 upvotes and 0 payout. How many upvotes would you need?

https://steemit.com/steem/@krischik/seven-upvotes-and-no-payout

> is it actually adding sufficient value to the network to warrant a payout?

Wrong question: Will the network be adding sufficient value for me to stay.

You are removing what make your network unique (monetisation for small accounts) while the competition (https://www.minds.com) is catching on.

@timcliff | April 21, 2018, 2:27 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Steem is a stake based systems. Votes from users with more stake are worth more.

> Will the network be adding sufficient value for me to stay.

Nobody is really entitled to rewards here. There are (unfortunately) lots of users that do add value that are under paid. Getting noticed is really one of the big struggles here. It is going to be the same on most platforms though. If anyone can just show up and start earning tons of money without adding value, then that is probably not a sustainable system.

@krischik | April 21, 2018, 5:58 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

> Steem is a stake based systems. Votes from users with more stake are worth more.

Which is not a bad thing. For example on Minds all votes are the same and I am not sure that's a good idea. We see how that goes.

I am a bit on the middle ground here: I think a stake bases system is a good idea but I am unsure of an unlimited and linear stake based system because that is very difficult to balance.

@fitzgibbon | April 16, 2018, 9:46 a.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

No one is censoring messages in this method, so there is no cost by applying a higher dust threshold. There is no discouragement either. There's only a 'quality' threshold before financial rewarding occurs.

The risk here is that insightful, value-adding comments won't get rewarded financially if they are not seen or upvoted by people with enough SP. I don't think that's a problem, those insightful, value-adding comments do get rewarded in other ways: relation-building, follower-growing, meaningful discussion, etc.

The problem with spam is that it's done purely for the financial incentive. Remove that incentive and you will drastically see the level of spam drop.

@timcliff: I really like the idea, but the actual value of the dust threshold (whether that's 0.1 SBD, 0.5 SBD, or any other value) should be part of a permanent discussion and always open to debate as the situation on the Steem platform changes.

@krischik | April 20, 2018, 2:38 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

> There is no discouragement either.

Of course there is. I would be discouraged enough to leave the platform for https://www.minds.com

> relation-building, follower-growing, meaningful discussion, etc.

Which is the reason I would leave for Minds. Minds is better at all of those. And soon Minds is getting a cryptocurrency as well. And as beta tester of that cryptocurrency: It looks like rewards for small accounts will be better on Minds.

@charitybot | May 8, 2018, 5:48 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Looks like their view-count and vote activity is already higher on some posts, and that's even without the crypto distributions attached? Wow. The site layout and the content doesn't seem too bad either.

@ats-david | April 17, 2018, 5:25 p.m. | Votes: 12 | [ VOTE ]

I agree with you here. Reducing spam by making it less lucrative is a great idea. But this proposal is just another symptom treatment that ignores the actual disease.

Spamming can be more easily and effectively handled by blockchain protocols that were already working in the past. And they can be handled by actually applying bandwidth restrictions that were meant to explicitly deal with spamming.

Rounding rewards from $0.10 or $0.50 (or even $1.00!!!) down to zero isn’t a solution. Most users would be making nothing from interactions at that point. And without rewards, this place would be “dead.” Sad, but true.

How about we roll back full linear rewards (and find a better alterative to n2) and delegation (the two things that make spamming lucrative and reduce accountability and the engagement from “invested” users) and tighten bandwidth restrictions so that both comment and wallet spammers aren’t able to run wild with their scam promoting and block bloat? And at the same time, perhaps STINC can halt the creation of massive bot-nets via their sign-up process?

Tap-dancing around the causes of our many problems here won’t fix anything. They need to be confronted head-on. To do that, the sources of the problems need to be identified. But to do that, there needs to be an honest conversation about it...where criticism isn’t automatically/reflexively shut down in favor of endless cheerleading.

@freebornangel | April 17, 2018, 5:48 p.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

Until dissent gets some support its full steem ahead for the circle jerk.

@eaglespirit | April 17, 2018, 10:59 p.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

lmao theres my hero

@freebornangel | April 17, 2018, 11:48 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

I will be glad when i can get back to crapitalism being the bad guy on the block,...

@eaglespirit | April 18, 2018, 5:11 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

its always been

@old-guy-photos | April 17, 2018, 6:02 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Exactly! This is why I support your witness.

@maverickinvictus | April 19, 2018, 3:57 a.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

Boom that there is a good solution. raising it to .20 and even 1 dollar is just anti plankton.

So you are telling us to hold on until a nice whale takes notice of you but keep posting you'll get there eventually. Shakes my head.

@miss-j | May 5, 2018, 9:49 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

yeah this is the most ridiculous idea ive heard in awhile. lol talk about repelling all new users to the platform.

@krischik | April 20, 2018, 2:30 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

> How about we roll back full linear rewards (and find a better alterative to n2)

I had an idea on that one a few days ago:

https://steemit.com/steem/@krischik/seven-upvotes-and-no-payout

@cheater | April 21, 2018, 1:22 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

My own existence is a testament to the problem with account creation through steemit.

Amen!

@eaglespirit | April 17, 2018, 11 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

exactly true

@mawit07 | April 16, 2018, 4:20 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

If minimum for earning rewards rises I think it will likely hurt more than to stop spam. A lot of plankton members give upvotes way less than even 0.02. Hard to see it go up being helpful if for starting members to have little to no say on the platform.

If such as thing gets implemented is it possible to put limitations on specific members? Like if a member has a SP of at least 500 their minimum upvote required to earn rewards would be higher than someone who has less than 500 SP.

@timcliff | April 16, 2018, 4:57 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

People would just split their SP across multiple accounts to game the system, which would likely end up creating even more spam

@isnochys | April 16, 2018, 4:38 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Have a look here for a registration solution :
https://steemit.com/steem/@guiltyparties/account-creation-issues-solutions

@timcliff | April 16, 2018, 5 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

I am aware of the suggestions and have been discussing In GitHub, thanks!

They alone are not going to “solve” the signup system, but they are definitely good suggestions that will help :)

@thedarkhorse | April 16, 2018, 5:56 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

I don't think that my being part of steemit really matters in the overall grand picture, but I'm like many others who produce some content, have bought Steem to power up, and take time to help smaller members grow.

But if many of the ideas being tossed around were in effect when I joined there is absolutely no chance I would have bothered to stick around and for sure wouldn't have purchased any steem.

It's really easy when you can rack up a $94 payout in 10 hours to talk about 0.10, 0.25, or 1.0 SBD as a nominal amount, but for a new member making anything at all is hard. We are talking about being excited to get a 0.10 SBD payout...not looking at it as something that can be tossed to the side and ignored.

Potentially owing money because someone flagged me would have been a massive red flag to me and stopped me from joining. No way someone that isn't already here can understand the flagging system enough to get that the odds of owing money if you aren't a spammer is small so this would just be a roadblock.

Like many I hate the spammers and flag them on my posts, but we need to think about the honest newbies and the effect on them first and foremost. If not we can forget about the explosive future growth we all hope to see, we won't have any future growth at all as newbies will sign up and then leave just as fast.

@timcliff | April 16, 2018, 7:09 a.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

Believe it or not, but I do understand what it is like to be a new user. When I first joined, I made 0.00 on all my posts - just like pretty much everyone else that is new. It took me 3-4 months of pretty consistent effort to start making any significant rewards. For me at least, it was never a 0.05 payout (or even a bunch of them) that kept me going though. It was always the idea that if I kept at it, I could eventually make a lot someday. I do get what you are saying though, and a lot of people are saying the same thing. So it probably will be best to not make the change.

@thedarkhorse | April 16, 2018, 12:44 p.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

I believe that you remember as nobody was here that long to forget...or at least I hope they didn't. But being a new member has gotten harder and harder over time as so many of the whales and dolphins are now using much of their voting power for bidbots which are an automatic looser for newbies. The reward pool is decimated with trash making the trending page sucking up massive amounts of the pool each day.

If we want to worry about spam how about not focusing on the pennies and looking at the thousands being earned by the professional spammers.

@timcliff | April 16, 2018, 2:07 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Good point. Agreed.

@cryptoblasting | April 16, 2018, 6 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

What is Spam Anyway? 👁💖🐽

I have been called spam before. I just thought well then so was that, but mine was at least nice. I have noticed it is a thing now. Saying a single word can be spam. 🍾 🍻. Spam.

Spam?

People feel the need to point spam out and say "spam". Calling someone words spam is worse then the act. It is rude spam to make a person feel like their words don't count. That sentence was just me spamming about a spammer, being called spam buy a spammer who was spamming them. Then when I didn't approve I called the 2nd spammer out saying you're "rude spam" and now I am too, but it is even spammyier that I just pointed all that spam out . Spammyier just became a word I had to use. I'd have to say that is spam too. 🐖 A whole hog of spam. Try to fit all that in a can.

Spam.

People have become so concerned with spam they are spamming it. To me spam is mass e-mail from people named "Amazon Order" or with the title "$$$ Claim your $500 Before It Is Too Late!! $$$", then that get bombed to thousands of people that don't care about it.

Spam?

This new spam the😊 kind. It drives people nuts. Then you write to much, "spam too".🙊

On a dice site where users rain crypto randomly on the people active in chat when they win big. The moderators are kind of "Spam Nazis". Someone will start pouring down crypto.
🌧🌧🌧🌧
>"Thanks for the rain!"
>"Stop spamming."

🌧🌧🌧🌧
> "Dude!!! You are too nice. I just won twice!"
>"Stop spamming or I will block you from chat for a week."
> "Sorry, Good luck with the rain winners I am going to roll some dice!"
> "Notice: Chat will be available in 168 hours."

Spam Can Be Bad or Good

Just pointing that out. Just because a large group of people think a "nice thing" is not a necessity, so let's eradicate that. They should step back and look at it differently. This is just a guess as this is my first post, but I clicked my first click on that that thing by @timcliff 's $93.35 and he got a buck! (This is Droopy from help. I made it! LOL.) So, if people's smiley on some persons post gets them a penny or two. I think they earned it. We can down vote too right? People can do that if they do not like spam and someone likes a smiley someone gave them; we can all down vote that all like your smiley is spam, boooo!
If people want to spam smileys on empty posts and it gets a click by the original poster no doubt. I think the best thing we could do as a community is something like this:
>if( is_comment_payout_dust( ctx.current_steem_price, payout ) && ( ctx.rshares == 1 ) && ( ctx.total_reward_shares2 == 1) && ( context_count==1 ) && (ctx==1) && ((context == 😊 || 💖 || 😄))
payout = 0.01
u256 total_claims = to256( ctx.total_reward_shares2 ) - 0.01;

I dunno obviously how to code that but if this was a test and was like whaaa?? And people didn't get the point they are either lazy or know less then me, cuz you get that if you code at all. It basically says if that is dust to people then we should let the nice one's keep it for doing what we are all to lazy too do, even for a penny like no thanks. So, If someone posts 1000 smileys and makes 100 people smile they deserve a dollar for doing that. Some posts get $100 for stuff. To me the answer is an obvious, "No." I fell like this is a thing we should try to promote.👁 💖 🐽 if someone 💖's it too.

Everything can be good or bad

LOL. I wrote a lot this is a spam length spam reply. I just like spam. Even the food. Pan fry it. !Put it on bread with an egg. I am actually about to have a spam sandwich. This got me in a Spam mood. If you read all this you must like pam too!

Mostly bad if you can't cook.

[IMAGE: https://steemitimages.com/DQmQCKeLNDPYZD9YqvdwiLYdWjyvsVFdBXjCDhkPJpMHbmq/Spam.JPG]

Cans Made by SPAM, Pictures by Wal-mart, Collage by Google-Ads, Snip by Cryptoblasting Emojis by the emoji guy, the font guy made the font. I just typed, snipped, and pasted. With out tons of help you couldn't read this. It wouldn't be here. Between the two of us I doubt we are not that that smart. Well maybe you are. But really, thank you power plant dude and the ditch witch guy, we need him too. There is a bunch of wires between me and you. But that's a nice picture of spam you see. Why do we always have to credit, while we forget it was a lot more work to make it a picture a thing you can see. If we credit the people that deserve it the most we would never stop. So on my first post, thank you much credit to everybody and not just the people that contributed intellectually in the spam pic.

@timcliff | April 16, 2018, 7:16 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Interesting point. A lot of what is spam is subjective, and a “gray area”. When there are people who write bots to leave comments, and the comments are not really adding anything to the discussion though - are they adding value? They do have a cost to them. Not to the users who post them, but to everyone (including developers and exchanges) who have to pay the costs of the servers that run the blockchain where all the content is stored.

Thanks for the thought provoking comment though. This one here is not considered spam ;)

@cryptoblasting | April 16, 2018, 9:35 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Well for sure I can see bots being an issue. That shouldn't pay. It is not earned and I guess you are saying there is no way to tell who does what as there is no all seeing eye, just up votes and down votes. To sorta guess what a person as been up to. But a smiley bot smiles on every post, bots have done worse. I made friends with a welcome bot I was like geese your polite. Dogelord at the bitcoin pub. It is like wait who is guiding the conversation dude. I don't normally be-friend bots. I was board so I wrote him a thing and he responded better then most people do. I was like dude you're kinda cool. 😆 < I just got that those are teeth. My whole life has been, hmmm, why all the milk mustaches? Not kidding.

@karinquintero | April 18, 2018, 7 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Like, excelent description grafhics

@cryptoblasting | April 18, 2018, 10:52 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Thanks! @karinquitero ✌Hope you are having a great day. I'm in a really good mood. You helped with that and look Fred did too 🎅 Look what he bought through one of my links,
SHHHHAAA!
[IMAGE: https://steemitimages.com/DQmfXBm7r962mGbaBw8KqPQU8hto3CAFwBeTXbEh8HuqPVh/Thankyoufred.JPG]
$150,000 of SHA-256 hashrate. I now have 12 S-9 ant-miners. I like overdrew my bank to place those ads thanks for clicking that Fred.
🎄🎇🎁🎇🎄🎇🎁🎇🎄🎇🎁🎇🎄🎇🎁🎇🎄🎇🎁🎇🎄🎇🎁🎇🎄🎇🎁🎇🎄🎇🎁🎇🎄🎇🎁🎇🎄🎇🎁🎇🎄🎇🎁🎇🎄🎇🎁🎇🎄🎇🎁🎇🎄🎇🎁🎇🎄🎇🎁🎇🎄🎇🎁🎇🎄🎇🎁🎇🎄🎇🎁🎇🎄🎇🎁🎇🎄🎇🎁🎇🎄🎇🎁🎇🎄🎇🎁🎇🎄🎇🎁🎇🎄🎇🎁🎇🎄🎇🎁🎇🎄🎇🎁🎇🎄
There ya go @karinquitero now you can feel like its Christmas too!!!

@cryptoblasting | April 18, 2018, 10:55 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Now pray that is not a scam cuz if it is Fred dude!! 18 BTC is a bit. If it is not well you must be sitting on a whole lot.

@katteasis | April 16, 2018, 6:42 a.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

>> If we increased this threshold up to 0.10 SBD, or even 0.25 or 1.00 SBD - then posts/comments that did not receive sufficient votes to pass this threshold would receive zero payout. This would likely decrease the incentive for users to create spam.

This is baddest idea.

I cannot agree with this. This is another way to say goodbye to new users or users who don't have much steempower on their account. Do you think it's eays to make 0.1SBD for new users?? I am here from last july and till now I could only accumulate around 2000 SP with more than 1500 followers, I can't even make 0.5 SBD from organic upvote including my self-upvote. You can simply imagine the situation of new users. they have already made this place a botland and most of the big users even witness has massively involved on vote-selling rather than giving organic vote for someone.
First, propose something to improve this situation rather than putting a threshold. Or you guys already has had enough of users and don't want more from inside???? This will only affect the real users or new users and spammers and circle jerkers are still safe.

@blogiwank | April 16, 2018, 7:21 a.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

Oh God. This is really really bad idea, @timcliff

I speak now based on my experience with Indonesian Steemit community in my hometown. Almost all of them are minnows. It means they only can vote pennies and get pennies too.

But they are happy when people vote their works. They know that people support him/her even though their vote values only 0.0000001. And they keep trying to write good works. It is good step to build their reputation and maybe someday some whales will support them.

Your idea to increase total voting value will break their heart. It will decrease their motivation. Soon they will leave this platform.

Of course I support your idea to eliminate spammers. But please don’t make minnows to become victims.

You know this maxim: Don't burn your house down to smoke out a rat.

@timcliff | April 16, 2018, 1:56 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Thanks for the feedback :)

@ace108 | April 16, 2018, 7:23 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

I don't think it will stop the spam totally unless the threshold is making it not worthwhile to "mine" with comments if you know what I mean.
I think the spammy comments takes little or no effort to maintain once it is setup. Perhaps, it makes it less worthwhile for new spammy bots to be setup but I doubt it will make them go away. Kind of like even when they are flag to zero rep they still continue. And then I see even negative rep and they are still continuing.

@steemmillionaire | April 16, 2018, 9:25 a.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

I do not think that this will remove spam, but it will have opposite effect, the new & small newcomers will have no chance to have their content visible, independent of the value of their content. Why? Because spammers will use paid votes (yes, they have the money for it) to increase the value of the spams above the dust limit. Spam will get promoted, and they will get the payout. But the categories will be filled with promoted spam, making it impossible for the newcomers to get in the hot spot.

@timcliff | April 16, 2018, 2:05 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

If spammers use paid votes, they are putting their own money at risk from getting downvoted. New users would have an easier time being discovered if the huge amount of spam was not around. Just something to think about.

@steemmillionaire | April 16, 2018, 4:23 p.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

Also correct! But then, a better idea would be to code in the STEEM protocol the possibility to have a limited amount of free down votes, so that the people are encourage to flag the spam (free in the sense that they should not consume voting power)

@timcliff | April 16, 2018, 4:36 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

I support that idea. Basically if there could be separate voting power pools - one for upvoted, and one for downvotes - that would do the trick.

@steemmillionaire | April 16, 2018, 4:58 p.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

Yes, this can work. Also, rewards and transfers should not be available for people with low reputation... this would make the Steemit a completely different world. Imagine, ... reputation <50? No transfers possible! Or, ... reputation <25? All posts set to "decline payout"! 😀

@timcliff | April 17, 2018, 1:23 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

That part won't fly :)

@bashadow | April 20, 2018, 4:06 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

I don't think it would matter how many Free downvotes I had. I just went past the 500SP and my downvote would knock off a whopping $0.100 of a spammers payout. A person with 50SP may get lucky and be able to knock off a whopping $0.001 of a spam payout. So more downvotes are not going to help anyone other that the people with a lot of SP because then they would be able to downvote your account into the ground and not cost them a single penny. So free downvote=really really bad idea.

@codypanama | April 16, 2018, 1:50 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Hi Tim, Good to see you are one of the good guys trying to fix stuff around here. I'm a little heartbroken from a small search looking for the original miners. below is 1 example of thousands of fake accounts that mined and now thousands are just opening for the initial SP awarded. Just last week, so many of the similar to below accounts are being drained.
[IMAGE: https://steemitimages.com/DQmXgi4wiSigFRnkqxLGDLZpXiavqGGTKYsyJ3hzST9m8Lt/auto%20vesting.jpg]
Seems incredible to me that these people are not happy with the wealth they have already accumulated but seem hell bent on killing the platform with their greed.
Can we now move impecible people into all witness positions and fix the flaws, or just start again from scratch with an honest distribution system?
I Love the platform and the people I have met here, But we are all being gamed just like the Governments and banking systems that rob us of the fruits of our labors but somehow keep us passive with crumbs returned.
Cheers

@timcliff | April 16, 2018, 2:09 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

I think all the issues we face today are solvable.

@codypanama | April 16, 2018, 6:19 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

I hope you are right, I'm rather fond of the community's here. Is delegation elimination planned? they are just selling sp every day over and over right now. but you know all this.
I enjoy steemit for the people not the coin, but it's the principal that gets my goat. LOL
Can we please have 1 coin someday that's not a scam!
Please :-)
Take care & good luck

@timcliff | April 17, 2018, 1:25 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Delegation elimination is not planned. There are two sides to it though - stakeholders being allowed to delegate SP does a few good things:
1. It lets large stakeholders support projects that they think are benefiting the community
2. It gives SP holders something to do with their SP other than selling it - which helps bring up the price, thus generating more rewards.

@abh12345 | April 18, 2018, 5:36 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

As much as I really do not like the clinical use of the rewards pool on crap by the bidbots, people do need to understand that without delegation, projects like utopian, dtube, dlive, sndbox, spaminator, etc would likely not be here.

Having thought about your proposal overnight, I'm for it and will likely post about it soon. It may take the unwarranted heat off you a little!

@timcliff | April 18, 2018, 11:53 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

I'm OK with the 'heat'. You may not want to post about the idea though. Based on the feedback, I don't think it will be going anywhere. I also don't think it is one worth fighting for :)

@eaglespirit | April 18, 2018, 12:30 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

yes yes yes thank you for seeing and saying it!!

@codypanama | April 18, 2018, 12:25 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

This is a hard nut to crack, Thanks so much for acknowledging an important issue. 🙌
Anybody with a little income/power here has to ignore these issues or risk shooting themselves in the foot.
You just make sure all important people in a system are paid well enough to keep their mouths shut and turn a blind eye to injustice to carry on unchallenged.
This works in every area of life, Good people are forced out for making waves or leave on their own accord by their conscious not allowing them to participate.
I feel another blog coming on. They pain me to do, steal my joy plus I'm sure to lose followers over them so why bother? @blocktrades used to swing by every now and then and throw me a $100 + vote but now they just sell that vote on a daily basis to whoever pays for it.
And people defend them tooth and nail who want to climb the ladder by any means possible.
Thanks for being my only cheer leader in comments to date. 😎 LOL
I much prefer optomistic and fun content blogging, it way more my style but being a band member on the Titanic playing till the end is both Noble & Stupid at the same time.
Cheers

@eaglespirit | April 19, 2018, 3:29 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

whoa, lovely comment and you area breathe of fresh air to me! thank you for such an uplifting and lovely response.
i am in 100 percent agreement and wow lucky to even have one 100 upvote. i have yet to get that much luck. i have had consistent support thought, with upvotes and a small deli. sooo that said,
i do not want to sound ungrateful or greedy. this has helped me grow my account consistently and although i work very hard, it has all been worth it. i am with you on the optimistic and fun side of things. right there.
blessings,
eagle

@eonwarped | April 16, 2018, 2 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Many people's reaction to the post:

What? It needs to be at least 0.02 to pay out? Why have I been wasting my VP on comments my whole steemit life? (Exaggeration. But would definitely change behavior having this knowledge)

Because as the saying goes,

"Penny for your thoughts. Just kidding! It's dust!"

Even at current thresholds, what many here consider to be high, spammers are not deterred. And you know my guess? Because they aren't after payouts at all. They are after advertisement.

So my answer is an emphatic no on the change, because I don't believe it will help. I don't see any suggestions here that address the main incentive that I see for spamming. And I don't have any myself in terms of protocol changes either...

But anyway, thank you for pointing out the threshold, I think this is something many people do not know.

@eaglespirit | April 18, 2018, 12:29 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

im
with with this guy ^^^

@hedac | April 16, 2018, 3:17 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

It is good you are thinking about solving spam. But automated ways can be problematic. And in comments, many times we only have one single vote, worth 0.01, and it means a lot. It would be psychologically a bit bad if that cent that a lovely friend gave you is removed. I know it can sound stupid... being only 1 cent.

I cannot contribute with code in github, since it is not my programming language, but with ideas.
I guess it is a bit more complicated to do, but what about being able to flag posts/comments with different types of flagging, one of them could be flag as possible spam. Then if only one person flags it as spam, nothing happens, it could have been a bad interpretation, but if many different people flag a post as spam, then all pending payout rewards are removed from that user and bandwidth is halved or something similar. They could buy SP again and keep doing it? Then maybe a spam flagged user, should not be able to increase bandwidth or SP for some months for example. We could also flag users, not only posts.
Thanks!

@underground | April 16, 2018, 3:53 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

I use this quite a bit:
[IMAGE: https://steemitimages.com/DQmcVBmHKkyW4caBg2dXSKhxqYJD8QCf6JHztuVav8LNtBT/shitpost_GIF.gif]
I think that a combination of things, done consistently will do the trick...

@arcange | April 16, 2018, 4:18 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Congratulations @timcliff!
Your post was mentioned in the Steemit Hit Parade in the following category:

  • Comments - Ranked 7 with 177 comments
@laxam | April 16, 2018, 7:21 p.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

Hey, let's make poor poorer and reach reacher, works every time!

@timcliff | April 17, 2018, 1:26 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

What if the poor people are being made poorer because nobody can find their good content beneath all the crap (spam)?

@omitaylor | April 19, 2018, 1:42 a.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

How so @timcliff. Good content is first off, subjective. Nonetheless, I personally read upwards of 10 posts a day that are at least 500 words in actual text. If I can find them (easily, in 2 seconds); anyone else can who wants to. Bloat is another topic because one could say that blockchains are meant to grow and other interfaces (like steepshot) have a right to create their own TOS and have their own licenses (or risk not having them.)

At present Steemit is the TOR to the Steem dark-blockchain. And like the darkweb, there's tools. Steemplus has filters. Steem-buddy lets you find people by real interest.

If people want to find good content, they will. If they don't want to make an effort, less so. The condenser is not designed to deliver a platter of selection bias to each user like Facebook.

Sigh

@themerge | April 16, 2018, 9:07 p.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

It seems to me your only making it harder for people to make Steem work. Most people around the world don't have the money to buy influence (SP) and most people are not going to be upvoted by a whale, so every fraction of a cent counts. I also noticed that most whale votes to to people with a higher SP already and it isn't because they are putting out good content. I sense a click mentality and the people with decent SP already have their peer group, so eliminating "low value" SP rewards might turn this place into a country club. Just my two cents and I could be wrong.

@timcliff | April 17, 2018, 1:28 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

I've upvoted quite a few non-whales who have commented here (on this post), significantly above $0.10. I also upvote a lot of posts from users who post quality content (regardless of their stake). Not every 'whale' votes the same way. I do agree though with the sentiment that getting noticed here is very hard. I started at the same place as everyone else, and it took me many months to get 'noticed'.

@themerge | April 17, 2018, 2:11 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

I just wrote something and I would like to know what you think. IF we don't implement something I don't think Steem has a future. https://steemit.com/steem/@themerge/i-don-t-see-how-steemit-can-continue-to-exist

@timcliff | April 17, 2018, 2:36 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Replied there

@eaglespirit | April 18, 2018, 12:27 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

amen and great comment!

@johnhtims | April 17, 2018, 8:45 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

I think steemit should be very very careful about not taking minnows for granted. A LOT of people that I use to engage with here on steemit no longer post here and just left without a word. I don't know if they quit steemit but their account has been dormant for a while.

This solution seems rather draconian and I'm not even sure if it would stop spam since commenting would still be free unlike the memo message function which has a minimum 0.001 SBD fee.

@rentmoney | April 17, 2018, 3:43 p.m. | Votes: 4 | [ VOTE ]

The problem with implementing such a change is that it lumps everyone together. Punishing the newbie / minnow user who are providing good content to the platform because you want to punish spammers. Good content can't always be defined by it's monetary value. If you are a newbie / minnow then for the most part your good content goes unnoticed aside from some other newbies / minnows commenting and upvoting. You can get a dozen upvotes from newbies that like your post and only have 0.05 in rewards. Why should such a comment have it's rewards removed due to wanting to punish spammers ? The answer is that it shouldn't. Newbies and minnows alike depend on these small payouts to grow our account. It's a momentum occasion when we see one of our comments has reached $1.00 in rewards.

https://www.promonet.co.uk/images/articles/no-minimum.jpg
Picture Source

If Steemit goes in this direction, for the most part only Dolphins and Whales ( posters with the most influence on steemit ) will be receiving the bulk of the payments. It's hard enough to succeed on steemit as a newbie / minnow if this is introduced it will only get harder. These small payments we receive as newbies is what helps us grow our account.

No-Min-Payment

@freebornangel | April 17, 2018, 4:59 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Really, Tim?

Lets make it even less attractive to the newbs by taking what little rewards they do get?
Not all of us are, nor will be, golden boys of the blockchain.

I was told that even when the ui rounded down the payout the vests were still credited tothe account.
Is this not true?

@timcliff | April 17, 2018, 11:50 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

As far as I know, anything less than 0.02 is rounded down to zero.

@freebornangel | April 18, 2018, 12:05 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Hmm, i was told that the ui rounded down but that the vests still credited, presumably as sp.
If that is the case, its no wonder 800k newbs have told us to get bent.

@ranatalha | April 17, 2018, 5:38 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

good this will help

@jga | April 17, 2018, 6:56 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

I think they will continue spamming even if they do not receive rewards. The big loosers would be the minnows and they need support, starting with pennys.

@timcliff maybe you are interested in my proposal to reduce self-voting and voting-rings. I just published it.

@simplymike | April 17, 2018, 10:04 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

I’m all for reducing spam, but forgive me if i think your idea is just awful.
I post over 400 comments a week, that’s over 145k characters (you can check @abh12345’s Engagement Leagues) and I invite you to check out my comment rewards at http://steem.supply/@simplymike.
I’m too lazy (and shocked about the idea) to do the math, but if there is 1 comment a day that earns 0.1, I’m lucky.

The only result of implementing this idea is that you take away motivation to comment. Because maybe the spammers can earn a couple of cents by posting spam comments, those same cents are the sole source of income to almost all red fish and minnows.

It’s like you think Steemit isn’t killing itself because of all its flaws fast enough, you want to speed up the process by taking away the tiny rewards all the small guys here work so hard for, and thus chasing them away.

I’m sorry, but it feels like you have forgotten what it was like to work your ass off to write a decent post, only to get 2 cents and 10 views as a reward.

When the people with a lot of SP might go around and are willing to upvote the little guys that add valuable content a little more, instead of only voting for each other (fortunately there are a couple of exceptions), maybe the little guys would be more encouraged to make valuable comments.

So how about rewarding the ‘good behaviour’ instead of punishing all the small guys because some people post spam?

@timcliff | April 17, 2018, 11:56 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

I try to. Unfortunately, I don’t have enough SP to make too significant of a difference. I don’t use vote bots or vote buying, and I try to vote on a lot of good content regardless of who posts it.

@norwegianbikeman | April 17, 2018, 10:40 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

as a minnow its make more sens now. on the pay out, a think is i good think to have a border but it Ned to stay where it is now. the platform Ned to be inviting to new members. and to make it harder its not the way to go but a think to remove a bit of bandwidth or add more down voting anti spam bots is the way to go.

@novacadian | April 17, 2018, 10:49 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

To even propose such an elitist solution has me questioning my witness vote.

@timcliff | April 18, 2018, midnight | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Well in my opinion, it is not bad to propose an idea like this. There are a lot of problems that need to be solved, and if we as witnesses are not trying to think of solutions, then I don’t think we are really doing our jobs.

I have listened to the feedback since I created the post, and it is pretty clear that the community feels the negatives outweigh the positives on this one.

@novacadian | April 18, 2018, 1:52 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Maybe, @timcliff, instead of taking power away from non-spamming users we could give them more. Allow users to toggle on a feature that would present a CAPCHA when they went to vote. Such non-spammer/non-bot votes would be run through the n^2 calculation and all non-CAPCHA treated as n ().

Such an approach may depreciate two deviant activities in one swoop.

@timcliff | April 18, 2018, 2:30 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

It is not really a technically feasible solution.

@omitaylor | April 19, 2018, 2:08 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Who is in control of programming the Condenser on Steemit.com?

@timcliff | April 19, 2018, 2:41 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

It is an open-source project. Technically any community developer can submit a pull request. The Steemit dev team maintains the repository though, and they work on a majority of the changes.

@jan23com | April 17, 2018, 11:30 p.m. | Votes: 3 | [ VOTE ]

People will just buy votes to profit like they do now. In your FAQ section on Steemit this is considered abuse. Yet there is no effort to address this matter. The bots do not read an article and deem it as quality. They simply read a user has posted and automatically go vote.

A higher level will deter and increase the difficulty for new users to the platform to gain any type of foothold with an ability to progress further.
There is more confusion over the reward display amount. When a user receives a vote the vote is displayed in USD. If the price of SBD is 2 dollars. this means a reward value of 0.04 is needed not a displayed amount of 0.02.

The proposal in my newbie opinion creates a bigger issue than the one it is thought to provide.It will work great for whales though in returning more funds to the pool.

Photo groups where only a picture is needed to enter and rewards reach up to USD 40 and up, these are accepted voted on by many and in many cases, there is no proof of ownership of the picture. These I would consider spam, they offer nothing more than a picture although it might be a nice one. It is placed without context.

Again, this is the opinion of a newbie and I am sure there are many parts to this I do not see. I see possibilities for solutions, I am unsure if this is the right venue to voice them.

@timcliff | April 18, 2018, 12:04 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Good points.

@omitaylor | April 19, 2018, 12:55 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Well, I will not get into the discussion of bid bot use and other things deemed abuse by Steemit.com that are not considered abuse by Steem -dot- blockchain. If I install condenser on a server in Sealand then the Steemit.com TOS doesn't apply to me. and is perfectly lawful and not even a hack — it's 100% OKAY. If I send a Bid Bot to bid on that URL, it's a free market transaction.

So I don't want to get into that or make the conversation go left. This threshold is a lie to the face.

@eaglespirit | April 18, 2018, 12:39 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

dear @timcliff,
many of my compatriates have commented and i agree with many.
i am one of the top communicators on steemit and always looking for new ways to help the community.
the spammers need to be extracated and maybe this can be done at sign up.
also id love to help with oversight with a manual system to delete spammers, hackers and inactive accounts. maybe we need another group other than steemcleaners to work this aspect of the platform?
quality but fair control.

hurting others by taking away their money just seems unfair at this juncture of the game. especially for those of us that are still growing our accounts.

@morken | April 18, 2018, 12:51 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

I agree with your idea @eaglespirit

>the spammers need to be extracated and maybe this can be done at sign up.
>another group other than steemcleaners to delete spammer and hackers.
:-)

@eaglespirit | April 18, 2018, 5:09 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

ya!!

@morken | April 18, 2018, 12:45 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Good day @timcliff. Just got my chance to read your post today. I really appreciate witnesses especially with your effort to minimize spam. The idea is incredible actually and it will also promote to users the value of making great quality contents. However, this may somewhat be a discouragement to those potential quality content creators who have just started. I have known and met some creators who gets discouraged because of the pay-outs because reality will always tell that not all authors are here for the passion of writing (this may sound harsh but it is true). In addition, pay-outs are somewhat a bonus and a really great help for writers to be motivated.

This may be applicable if each nations has already firm and sustainable community that can somehow support newbies until they may be able to independently write and gain rewards from $.5 to $1.

By the way, thank you for this post @timcliff. If you happen to read this, I would like to thank you for the opportunity to let us speak. :-)

From Philippines with love,
@morken

@leeart | April 18, 2018, 1:37 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Then it is goodbye for us who doesn't even make enough from our posts. I think this will encourage users to use bots if that's the case. Only if they have the means to do so. How about those who doesn't? There are good contents out there but doesn't event make 1 SBD.

I don't have any suggestion for this, unfortunately.

@curatorcat | April 18, 2018, 4:52 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Complicated issue @timcliff.

Will such a measure help spam? Absolutely! It will probably — even if the threshold were $0.10 — eliminate 90% of spam.

What it will ALSO do is kill most engagement for newbies and... well, probably any minnows with much less than about 500SP. And since most sincere (aka "non-spamming") minnows try to climb the ladder of visibility through interaction and commenting, that whole part of the community will nosedive into the dust.

But since the "Human Greed Gene™" is alive and well on Steemit, I would expect a whole new class of upvote bots to explode into being: Comment voting bots that sell upvotes just big enough to lift comments into the payout range. So if I have a comment worth $0.06, I buy a $0.05 comment upvote to nudge myself over the threshold.

So I fear we'd end up trading one problem for another.

There's an old saying that "every time you make something idiot proof, they come up with a better idiot." And that seems a lot like what we keep seeing here.

If we hope to maintain a measure of freedom on Steemit — and not just end up with a bunch of "rules" and "policing," what really needs to happen is that someone needs to sit down and look at what can be tweaked at the source code level to create larger "carrots" for encouraged conduct and contributions, while making the carrots for undesirable conduct smaller.

Wanna self-upvote? Absolutely! But a vote for yourself drains your VP 5x faster than a vote for someone else-- first self-vote is "on the house."

Wanna use bots and automation to post? You're welcome! But install captchas and make it so a manual vote and comment posted by a human has triple (or some other multiple) the value of a mechanically posted vote.

Here's something I've seen on another site: If you try to paste the same comment multiple times, the second time you get a popup message that says something like *"Hi! We noticed you just tried to post the same comment twice! That could be considered spam!" without the comment posting. Have a 120-second timer on duplicated comments.

Reward NON spam activity; make it technically and logistically harder (and so, less worthwhile) to run automation and spam bots.

"But what about the whales who run legitimate curation bots and give out 1000's of 0.5% votes daily? And what about initiatives like cheetah and spaminator?"

OK... make it so you can buy/lease an "exemption," which will be granted as the result of a MANUAL peer review of your posting/curation habits; perhaps done by randomly selected witnesses, as part of "your duties as a witness." Similar process for curation trails.

But just to come back to point, it's great that you want to cut back spam, but please be mindful that the hammer you use to slam spammers won't also slam thousands of hard working minnows who are trying to become the future backbone of the community!

=^..^=

@mirrors | April 18, 2018, 7:46 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]
First, my sincere gratitude, @timcliff for trying to think out a way of
discouraging spam within the platform. A lot is obviously desired,
technical-wise. Let me just quickly pass my thoughts. I will straight away
start from where your proposed idea concludes



 If we increased this threshold up to 0.10 SBD, or even 0.25 or 1.00
SBD - then posts/comments that did not receive sufficient votes to pass this threshold would receive zero payout. This would likely decrease the
incentive for users to create spam.



But going by what we currently know, who otherwise upvote and reward those ‘spam’ comments? Two
categories, one, the spammer himself and two, the community.



Granted, the community will not upvote any such spam comment, and even if a
few do, it will not pass the set threshold to qualify for payout. Goal
achieved!



But how does that discourage the high Steem power spammer who will upvote
his own spam comment above the set threshold so to still qualify for
payout?



Do you know why the posts of people with High steem power comparatively get
the most upvotes and the most comments as well? Putting aside the issue of
upvotes, people comment because they hope, or indeed, scheme to get an
upvote on their comments by the high steem power post author.



Make a good comment, and you get rewarded with a high reward upvote.
Silently, and there is nothing we can do about this one, low steem power
accounts are disenfranchised. Why should I spend my time and energy
commenting on your blog, when the most your 100% vote can give me is 0.01$?
This is what the reward schemer asks, and many are. It after all isthe end, largely about rewards, no?



But of course not everyone is like that, and some people still visit and
take time to comment on posts by low Steempower authors, incentivized even
with the likelihood of that 0.01$, and if on a good day, accumulated to
more from other peoples collective upvotes.



Do you see the point I am driving at?



The threshold to qualify for payout that you here propose would be way
above what several people’s 100% upvote gives. The problem, which hopefully
I have built up to satisfactorily, is that people will only be further
discouraged from commenting on the posts of those whose 100% upvote
moreover does not at the end of the week qualify to pay out. I mean, why
should I anyway?



Setting the threshold as you so suggest, may to some extent discourage
spammers, but it would do so at the expense of further disenfranchising the
low steem power accounts from meaningful engagement by the community on
their posts.



Moreover, going by this threshold line of reasoning, it would equally seem
plausible to suggest that we set a threshold for rewards payout on posts,
in order to discourage shit posts! Do you see where we would be headed?
@kennyroy | April 18, 2018, 9:03 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

They already said what I need to tell. @justtryme90 and @ats-david, great comment!

@drutter | April 18, 2018, 9:44 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

I must hang around the wrong circles. My Steemit friends and followers tend to be worth about 0.1 cents per click. It takes a lot of us banding together, having discussions and contests and friendships, just to make the 0.02 cutoff. Those of you who started here a year ago, you started with a lump of Steem (compared to what we get now which is 0.1) and Steem was also easier to come by.
Do you want the only people on Steemit making money to be those who already have money? Only for investors, basically? Content creators will disappear if you stop paying them, which is already starting to happen. It's so hard to make money here even WITH good content, unless you're gaming the system somehow with bots and various tricks. If we don't figure out a way to genuinely bring in and reward the good content we all want to see and enjoy, it's going to disappear.
Making it even harder for new accounts to enter the ratrace is cruel, and unhealthy for Steemit.

@erikaflynn | April 18, 2018, 11:57 a.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

I don't think this is a good idea, it would be a serious blow to all newbies, red fishes and minnows (I mean real users, not cheaters)

Since all major share holders began to sell their votes, directly or with the help of bid bots, the minnows with vote cost of $0.01-0.1 became the only class that evaluates the content, based on its usefulness / quality ... as it is written in the White Paper. They are the only ones who read posts and leave a live feedback (checked on my own experience). Only minnows vote for other minnows and they have very limited number of votes to give.

At one time, Steemit greeted them with the words "Your vote is worth something", but most of them had to struggle for a long time to make their vote cost at least 1 cent. Now they are happy to leave this 1 cent under someone's post ... for free, as a gift, just to support the author or commenter... and now you want say to all these people "Your vote is worth nothing, because you are not a dolphin"...

@johndoer123 | April 18, 2018, 1:10 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

I have been on Steemit for a month. It has taken me this long to find my Niche here. Real quickly, what I do is three contests a week Monday Wednesday and Friday geared toward new people. While I may not be as successful as people like you, I feel what I do is important. And from what I hear from others as they do too. Sometimes I only get $0.20 to $0.50 per post. and with my posts I let everybody win who participates. That means that for the new guys that I have playing my games they get very little reward. And quite frankly, a lot of the time I end up paying out of my pocket to make sure that everybody gets a little bit. However to them because they are new and have no money it feels like a lot and helps them to want to stay around. If the minimum is raised I feel that a lot of my friends will leave. And truthfully I probably will too. No, as a matter of fact I know I will. And I know that probably to you, I don't matter that much. And neither do a whole lot of the other minnows floating around in your ocean. But if all of the minnows leave everything at the top of the chain will starve.

THE TOP OF THE TOTEM POLE QUICKLY BECOMES THE BOTTOM WHEN THE BOTTOM IS NEGLECTED.

With it already being as difficult as it is to get a start here, why would anybody who's already struggling stay? I am here because of this community. And because I believe in it. I am not here to make money. I'm here because I have faith in the system. If changes like these are implemented, I will simply abandon this platform and spend more time mining cryptos.
So the long and short of it in my humble opinion is that it's a bad idea. But you guys do what you want to, and we'll see how it plays out. It's ideas like this though, that make me want to pull out what little bit I have here and put it into other cryptos. I'm sorry if this is not what you were hoping to hear. But I will tell you that I am thankful that at least somebody is trying to think of a way to stop spam. Because I do too agree that something has to be done. However it seems to me like this is like telling somebody who uses marijuana for medicinal reasons that they will face the same fines and penalties as somebody who sells cocaine by the pound. I just truly don't think it will work out in the advantage of the platform. Thank you for taking the time to read this comment if you do. I'm going to ask that you please respond, because I'm curious to see if you even listen to what the people say. I believe that that will speak volumes about you as a person. That is not an attempt to be rude or or mean. It is just me being truthful. Thank you, and I hope you have a great day. Sending you all of my love until we meet again. And may our creator bless you and yours.
[IMAGE: https://steemitimages.com/DQmQ3Nc3frbBWHcRk4L66vbPqyew8K6giqVP8XS1Yx7X1j2/minnow-shots.gif]
Courtesy of CBS Minnesota

@timcliff | April 18, 2018, 11:59 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Feedback acknowledged. Based on the feedback that you and others have given - I don't see this proposal going anywhere.

@johndoer123 | April 19, 2018, 3:10 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Firstly, I would like to thank you for getting back with me. Secondly I would like to apologize for how I responded. I was upset and responded right away and I should have taken time to think about it. I just really really want this platform to succeed and I have promised all my friends that are all me to here that I will do what I can to help them in any way. One of them brought this to my attention and they seemed concerned. So I responded, and I should have calmed down first. Any case, thank you again for the response. I know with the games are Run for the newbies and trying to help them along their way that I can barely keep up. So I can only imagine how hard it is for you. Thank you for your time. And I wish for your continued success.

@timcliff | April 19, 2018, 3:24 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

No worries. People can get passionate when they care a lot about the platform. I totally understand :)

@johndoer123 | April 19, 2018, 10:29 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

So you know sir, you have earned my respect. I've chosen to follow you. I thank you for and appreciate the time that you have taken to reply to me. And the fact that you listen. As I said before, it really speaks volumes. I'm sure we'll meet again, so until then I send you and yours all of my love.

@timcliff | April 19, 2018, 10:39 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Thanks :)

@katrina-ariel | April 18, 2018, 11:13 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Having a higher threshold could work in some instances, but there would be even more need to support curation guilds that find users who are contributing to the platform and make sure they earn enough to stay here. There already is a need for massive support in this area. Perhaps you'd consider using your last witness vote for @curie. (No, I don't work with them, but they helped me find confidence on Steemit and I see the good they're doing this platform, so I'll make that suggestion as someone who votes for you as witness.)

I appreciate that you want to combat spam, but also please remember there are people using this platform whose posts might not make much, but to whom 1.5 SBD is equivalent to a month's wage. There are also a lot of people who join and don't have blogging skills yet, or are so overwhelmed with everything there is to learn it takes them a while to make friends.

Thanks for inviting public discussion on this issue, and for all you do to make the steemisphere a better place.

@omitaylor | April 19, 2018, 12:35 a.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

Reading this, I'm outraged — absolutely outraged — that this information has come to light. I thoroughly read everything about Steemit when I joined and when I came back after a hiatus. And where is it disclosed to new users their vote is essentially null on it's own — but appears not to be?

This is the kind of thing that pisses me off about Steemit. Sorry not sorry, for a platform that waves the banner of transparency it is hardly so.

Now I'm not one of those poor minded folks who gets angry about not getting my piece. I'm angry I can't give— unless I'm giving to the most popular.

I'm angry I was not told that I was wasting my f*cking time — which DOES have value — at least to me, my kids, my friends.... thanks Steemit.

And to put the validity of what I say and do FURTHER in the hands of those who may have more money in the platform (but not necessarily having any actual merit of their own) is beyond a smack in the face.

I suggest the "dust threshold" be removed ENTIRELY and set to ZERO — and developers actually put in some effort to developing filters, parsers, front-end solutions, throttlers, and other NORMAL things that fight phishing.

Seperater the Flag from the Downvote on Condenser and use Ajax to let users hide spam, comments, assholes, etc.
This is ridiculous. There is 10,000 developers here and nobody can do this? Do you want me to fix the Condenser?

How about a major 24 hour STEEMIT CODING EVENT?

I apologize for my tone and I know you personally aren't responsible necessarily for this being. All of these little nuances is why things are frustrating here.

Boldface lies, misleading, mixed signals, and poor parenting...

[IMAGE: https://steemitimages.com/DQmQWFw2zY5zZfrDwXeawJ2JBtRCLFU96Q7d7o21x3sMsTc/positive_negative_reinforcement.gif]
Jeff Stallings cc0

I think it's time someone addresses the scale of witness vote also being meaningless to minnows. Maybe people would vote more if they felt their vote mattered.

Oh and SP/Bandwidth locking people out of accounts so they can't even collect their own rewards or withdraw their own meaningless money.

$1000 may not be a lot to some people, but it may be a lot to the misled and love-blind minnowbase.

This needs to be in the FAQ, and in the WIKI, quite PLAIN too.

Don't get me wrong, I am a capitalist. I don't believe things should be fair. But I don't believe things should be a TOXIC TRAP of lies by omission.

What's next, will we force smaller accounts a high tax on contributing?

When will the higher accounts start trickling down huh?

There is a point where being useful crosses over into being used.

I feel used— already. Sorry, this is triggering. Lucky my vote is worth more but now I'm angry. Folks are worried about reward pool rape could be well to consider the TIME rape that happens by lying and misleading.

And then people complain about users who do things like use bots or sell votes to get rewards and power up. Is this not a handicap to new users helping new users? So I should just cocksuck bigger accounts then. Oh okay.

If I'm a minnow trying to help a brand new user who makes thoughtful comments, and I waste my voting power upvoting their comments then that's a waste for both of us.

So all minnows should basically spam lots of comments to get NOTICED without upvoting the conversation and never upvote unless it's adding to something already upvoted? Great way to stop spam?

And I could post 100 comments a day each getting 5 redfish votes and all of our time is just invalid. Hmph. Why waste my time? And this is already how it is — and we should consider further invalidating people?

>Tin foil hat moment: Could the phishing scams be implemented by wealthy steemians as a means to justify raising the threshold and widening the poverty gap? Why not just ask for slaves? Let me bend over and cough.

I'm interested in knowing what others think of this. I know if I resteem it that it will ignored so I'm calling forth the following people for their various points of view and opinions. @shadowspub @tibra @meno @cpnjacksparrow @novacadian @danielshortell @yallapapi @darrenclaxton @carlgnash @maverickfoo @simplymike @davemccoy @fraenk

Maybe I have this all wrong. I need a cup of coffee.

@meno | April 19, 2018, 12:53 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

It's understandable you are upset @omitaylor but I think @timcliff's intentions are good on this subject. I will grant you that the fact that the dust votes are technically worthless does need to be a lot clearer to users, but at the same time when the blockchain was implemented @dan had to think of a way to control spam and this was his idea... this does not mean its perfect and maybe it should be changed, but whatever solution we implement via another hard fork, we should still attempt to control spam.

This post, this conversation was an invitation to dialogue, so the fact that you've expressed yourself, means it has done its job. there is absolutely no current plans of implementing anything discussed on this post, and as you can see from many other commenters on this thread it seems to not have enough support to even be pushed forward.

I personally believe that this should be made clearer in the FAQ, but I'm also aware most users (I'm willing to take this to a test) don't read it anyways, not to excuse things it may lack.

I think the dust vote has symbolic weight, for whatever that means... we all started with a dust vote and I do remember making some friends with my 0.00 and a good comment, just like you have yourself.

How can we control spam?
I'm of the idea that we could implement maybe through hive/communities a labeling system that affects rewards. Meaning that if a user is labeled spammer, his/her rewards would be affected by the label, and the label would be given to users by community consensus, not by one single account, in the very same way SteemPlus does it labeling.

I'm not a dev, but I used to and this does not seem to be impossible to implement, it could be done in the front end of a mirror pertaining to a community even.

In any case, don't let this ruin your night, like I said this is just an invitation to brainstorm some ideas...

<3

@omitaylor | April 19, 2018, 1:31 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Thanks for your feedback. Had to adjust my slider so I could upvote you and not waste my voting power and trick you into thinking you actually earned something you didn't. :)
♥️

I know Tim is well meaning and I believe he's doing more than a lot of people by broaching the subject. It's not like he came out saying, "Just wanna informa'ya that ya'aint shit." This is what's called dry snitching... lol. He accidentally revealed something in context that few people knew about. Actually, I'm happy he did.

I'm not mad at him ... I'm mad about this.

Won't ruin my night. But I'll be making sure I adapt to the information and keep a close eye on what is intended for the future of the platform, and adapt my role within it. I think witnesses and Steem devs would be well to sit back and consider every nuance concerning how this platform conditions user behavior. Not everyone is driven by the same things.

Just for example, while I am validated by receiving: I also get intrinsic value by giving. The fact it costs me power to flag, or costs power to upvote redfish, etc. removes any extrinsic or intrinsic incentive to either (or be generous in general.) No wonder so many people here take advantage. It costs blood to be totally benign.

It's not Tims fault. However, the code itself is saying anyone who doesn't have 500SP bought or delegated to them is essentially worthless to the community and economy. If/When my current delegations expire, at 85SP my 100% vote is just making it as long as the market doesn't dip or something....

:(

@timcliff | April 19, 2018, 1:22 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

There is an issue here: https://github.com/steemit/condenser/issues/1819 if any community dev wants to submit a pull request.

@omitaylor | April 19, 2018, 3:08 a.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

Thank you @timcliff for posting the link

Setting reminder
@remind.bot 1week

@remind.bot | April 19, 2018, 3:10 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Mentioning and replying to you here on Thu, 26 Apr 2018 03:09:19 GMT to remind you of this post.
Please consider upvoting this comment to keep this service running.

@remind.bot | April 26, 2018, 3:10 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Reminding @omitaylor of this post as requested!
Please consider upvoting this comment to keep this service running.

@novacadian | April 19, 2018, 11:47 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

>Maybe I have this all wrong.

You understand the situation perfectly in my opinion, @omitaylor. The frustration is understandable as well.

That said there are some positives.

  1. We are discussing this issue with the very folk who could greenlight positive changes to the software, should it be presented to them.

  2. Being an open source project a contribution could come from anyone/anywhere.

  3. We are still, technically, in beta. The software is not etched in stone. It will change; how exactly will only be decided in time. Yet as frustrating as the situation may be the positive is that a debate is underway between minnows like us and those entrusted to guide this ship.

Call me an eternal optimist, but software solutions will be found in my opinion.

This seems a grand experiment in motion. An experiment that is exciting to watch how such conflicts, as this one, find resolution on the blockchain.

Such solutions found in this space could, and most likely will, have far reaching influence in blockchain technology.

Some coding bounties seem to be in order. The goals of those bounties seem to have been bounced about this post pretty clearly.

Let's except that the present dust level sucks and move forward seeking software solutions to deal with the rewards issues.

Because of the different motivations that keep us here, from artistic content contributions to investors seeking easy ROI, any solutions should expect a degree of compromise leading, ideally, to concensus.

@littlejoeward | April 19, 2018, 4:11 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

I will admit that I don't have much experience with steem's code but it seems to me like it would make more sense to make the bandwidth way lower. Also people should downvote spam whenever they see it. (As long as it's not a bigger fish)

@timcliff | April 19, 2018, 3:25 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Agreed on both fronts.

@scottcbusiness | April 19, 2018, 5:10 a.m. | Votes: 4 | [ VOTE ]

I like the motivation behind it, but if I can't reward my supporters with an upvote then they are less motivated to support me. It's nice to be nice both ways. This will punish smaller users and spammers alike

@omitaylor | April 19, 2018, 8:55 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

I have a separate question: I was watching Jerry Banfield speak on how top witnesses are getting about $300 per day. I found that video when I was asking around and researching the costs of having a full node and seed node. Crim said a fully outfitted witness + seed costs $600 a month. Granted, most smaller witness don't have full nodes or seed nodes nor are being paid. Smaller setups looked around a loss of around $150 a month until breaking even point, if lucky. Okay... some exchanges have witness nodes (not sure about seed nodes.)

Are these numbers wrong?

If these numbers are right, witnessing for the top witnesses pays for itself in 2 or 3 days. Can you explain why cost is a threat?

@timcliff | April 19, 2018, 4:03 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Here is a post that explains the witness pay. The ‘miner’ was replaced with an additional top witness (there are 20 now instead of 19) but the calculations are all still correct.
https://steemit.com/witness-category/@timcliff/til-how-much-witnesses-and-miners-make-per-block

Affording servers is not an issue for the top witnesses (assuming the price of STEEM stays above a certain level). The costs are a lot harder for the backup witnesses though - many of whom run their servers at a loss. There are also exchanges that run nodes, and if the costs for those get too high - we risk getting delisted from exchanges. Many third party developers also need to run nodes to support their applications - so expensive nodes are bad for them as well.

It is important for us to keep the costs to run servers in mind - because a lot of important parts of our ecosystem depend on running servers. Right now the cost per legitimate user for running the network is on the high side , and spam is part of why that is. That’s basically where the post is coming from, even though the particular solution being proposed doesn’t sound like it will fly.

@omitaylor | April 19, 2018, 6:33 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Is the miner returning with the next hard fork?

I'll read then and be back.

@timcliff | April 19, 2018, 6:50 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

No. They have proposed to add back mining, but only for account creation - not for producing blocks.

@ptcmyanmar | April 19, 2018, 2 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

If you want to reduce comment spam, you can prevent by doing this becasue they want to get upvote from it. But for the post spamming I think it happen in esteem community. Some users create multiple accounts and try to get upvote from esteem. You can check in this post.
https://steemit.com/english/@naturicia/abuse-of-the-votes-from-esteemapp-or-english

@pornworld | April 19, 2018, 3:34 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Wonderful

@glenalbrethsen | April 19, 2018, 4:29 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Hey @timcliff.

I'm trying to figure out how your idea here about raising the dust threshold to whatever it needs to be jives with the proposed HF 20 changes where the dust threshold is eliminated and SP downshifted by 1.219? How can a non-existent dust threshold be raised? Are we talking about two different things here but using the same term? I mentioned you on a comment I left for @smooth, so whichever one you're able to answer on is fine with me. No need to go for both.

@timcliff | April 19, 2018, 5:25 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

There are two different thresholds. One is for a vote to have enough to ‘count’ and the other is for a post/comment to have a high enough payout to receive a payout.

@glenalbrethsen | April 19, 2018, 6:46 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Okay. Now this is all making sense. I really wish we could come up with more than one way of naming things. :) But then, we've got $ stamped all over everything, too. :) I appreciate your response.

Now the question is, with what they've got planned with HF 20, and what you've thrown out for comment here, how does that all work in concert so that we're not completely into the realm of unintended consequences? If payout is being adjusted down via the HF 20 SP deal, and then the payout threshold is raised, just how much will we have to make in order to reach a "valuable" enough payout?

And what's to prevent these other scenarios in the comments where the spammers just change their tactics through consolidation or proliferation (or whatever other scheme works best) from happening? Is it possible to war game this out so we see what plausible adjustments the spammers will make so we can honestly gauge whether or not any moves made will actually have the desired effect?

@timcliff | April 19, 2018, 6:52 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

This proposal doesn’t really seem to be going anywhere, so I don’t think too much more thought needs to be put into it.

@biffybirdcam | April 20, 2018, 3:35 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

phewwww..

A lot of users who start out like me would quickly be turned away. If they are not making those pennies on their actual content, not spam..

I was only seeing 0.02 on average per post not too long ago. Beginning to gain traction but I feel a lot of people who aren't in the same shoes would walk away.

Ready to discuss the account issue on discord #5622

@timcliff | April 21, 2018, 2:23 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

> Ready to discuss the account issue on discord #5622

Not sure what you are referring to here. Sorry if I lost track of a previous conversation. I'm TimCliff#9168 there.

@angelacs | April 20, 2018, 10:19 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Hey @timcliff,

>Currently if a post/comment earns 0.001 to 0.019 SBD worth of rewards - this is rounded down to 0.00. If a post/comment earns at least 0.02 SBD - then they receive their reward.

I didn't know this.

Effectively this means that unless a Steemian has the 500 SP that unlocks the vote slider, s/he has no way to set their upvote to $0.02 and an upvote is wasted.

When I upvote a post or comment, my hope and intention is that 'value' adds up with the value of other upvotes so that the Steemian I upvoted gets it at payout. I do not upvote it for it to go back to the reward pool instead.

I have been preaching the 'heart value' of an upvote from my very first days here on Steemit. That seems hilarious now.

I've commented already in a couple other places on this post but here is what I'd like to personally request:

PLEASE make that '0.001 to 0.019 SBD' automatically rounded down be added to the FAQ and other important documentation so it becomes a KNOWN thing.

That way, peeps like myself who are evaluating how best to maximize our contribution on Steemit can know from the start that investing to get to the 500 SP level is required to be able to help support others on the platform.

From my teenage years, I've been looking for a way to make money while helping others make money too. That's why I spent a LOT of the intervening years involved in network marketing. I believed the hype that 'anyone can work hard and grow and be successful'.

When It hit me, finally, that every compensation plan I've ever worked was biased against the person with no money, I left network marketing. I could not be dishonest and waste time training peeps knowing the system itself worked against them.

I LOVE blogging on Steemit but the thing I love even MORE is being able to meet and greet other Steemians on their blogs and show support via my upvotes and comments.

If I knew before that all my 0.001 to 0.019 SBD upvotes meant nothing, I wouldn't have spent anytime upvoting UNTIL I got to 500 SP with slider, so I could control and make the value be minimum $0.02.

THAT means that I would not have commented either because I never comment on someone's blog without upvoting first. It's a respect thing. Commenting without upvoting is like barging in to someone's home without knocking on the door.

PLEASE do all you can to ensure that this 'less than $0.02 value means nothing' fact be emblazoned truthfully in all places a newb or potential Steemian can see it.

My heart hurts at finding this out. Thank you for your honesty. I truly appreciate it.

@krischik | April 20, 2018, 3:38 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

> Steemian has the 500 SP that unlocks the vote slider,

You can use https://busy.org/ — there the slider is active for all user

> upvote to $0.02 and an upvote is wasted.

But you can't set voting power to more then 100% so unless you have 100SP your vote is below the threshold.

However: two $0.01 votes make one $0.02 vote. That would then count.

@timcliff | April 21, 2018, 2:38 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

I have this issue open to address it: https://github.com/steemit/condenser/issues/1819

Also, you don't need the slider in order to reach 0.02. Without the slider, your votes are already at 100% strength. You can estimate how much votes are worth here: https://www.steemnow.com/upvotecalc.html

@krischik | April 20, 2018, 2:26 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

That is with with distinction the worse proposal on improving Steem I have yet seen.

It would take away any income plankton could hope for and significantly reduce the minnows income.

We already have a problem with new users opening accounts and abandoning them after a while. There is already to little incentive for plankton to stay.

And when https://www.minds.com has there cryptocurrency up it will get worse. Minds already has more users and better payout for smaller accounts.

Now that steem is permanently about $1.00 I think the 'right' threshold should be lowered to Ȿ 0.01 . Quite the opposite of raised.

@timcliff | April 21, 2018, 2:28 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

That does seem to be the general feedback.

@krischik | April 21, 2018, 5:40 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

It's only my personal opinion.

@newschannel428 | April 20, 2018, 7:15 p.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

the SadKitten bot needs to be stopped it only helps the whales, everyone knows that,AND when any post has a upvote that shows a amount besides zero that the post will most like then be viewed by someone and maybe even upvoted, and everyone who does up vote get a slice of the pie, the down votes hurt not only the person who upvotes their own post but others who also get a part of it. and when the coins are devided up by steem the only one who get any are the select inner circle aka the whales, which is the only reason that the sadkitten bot is really their, why not flag all the other bots out there who always upvote the whales the ip and vpn always show that the bots are from select whales even now some whales are now changing often the ip and vpn to cover ther butt, steem was a good idea at first then the greed and bots and now even more sad kitten proves it greed and censorship to keep the peasent poor while the rich get richer, greed is greed and nothing more and it will be the death of steem as people flee and will not want steem

@bluefoxy | April 21, 2018, 5:21 a.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

Hi @timcliff I'm not sure this is a great idea. If your starting out at the bottom and trying to add quality content you barely make anything even for quality content. I don't want to resort to using upvote bots for comments and posts.

@oleblueeye | April 25, 2018, 5:18 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

I Strongly Vote For No Minimum

(A Minnow's Point Of View)

I heartily agree with some of the others here like @justtryme9 and @ats-david that setting the minimum payout to 1.00 SBD, or even to 0.25 or 0.10 SBD is a terrible idea! In fact, I firmly believe that the minimum should be lowered from .02 to .01! Or have none at all!

The main reason for this is that Minnows Are The Bedrock of the Steemit Food Chain Pyramid!

Just like in the real world, it is not the Apex Predator species (we Humans, Grizzlies, Killer Whales etc. or some of the other creatures a few rungs below us) that are the most important members of the food chain. It is the exact opposite. It is the bottom members of the food chain that support and keep the whole pyramid alive! Without Plankton, Algae, Fungi, Earthworms, Krill and, yes, Minnows and the like, NONE of us would be here!

If a change like you suggest @timcliff is implemented in the next hardfork yes, it may indeed have the effect of reducing spam. However the main and most important effect it will have is to drive away the majority of the ‘food’ source for yourself and all the other whales and dolphins on here!

It’s hard enough being a minnow here on Steemit at present. For the majority of us Johnny-come-latelies making any kind of money here on Steemit is a constent uphill grind. You may not remember these days, if you ever had any, @timcliff, but for most us, the majority of our posts and comments see few if any votes and when we do receive them, they’re often from other minnows without the voting power for their upvotes to be worth much if anything at all. It’s very rare that a minnow or newbie has posts or comments that earn over .05 SBD let alone a whole whopping 1SBD! If you take our pennies and crumbs away from us, what point will we have to even be here and spend our precious time creating content and posts that hopefully someone, or, miracle of miracles, a Big Whale will swim along and upvote?

And you know what happens if Steemit has a large member and participation drop, right? It certainly won’t be much fun, or very profitable if it's just a handful of big whales and dolphins swimming around circle jerking each other. I mean no offence by that, I make it colorful just to make a point.

As we all know, Steemit is just in it’s BETA phase and the one of the main points and purposes for most of us here (at least I hope that’s the case) is to help Steemit grow, Massively Grow, it’s user base to the point where there’s Millions or even Billions of people using, enjoying and profiting from creating content on Steemit. If that happens, Whoo-Hoo! We all win! But if all of us new and hardworking minnows no longer have any incentive to be here - Poof! The party ends and it all goes away. For everyone.

Now, I am a newbie and I’m very much still learning my way around here. As well I’m certainly no coder and I don’t consider myself to be a crypto-genius by any stretch of the imagination. However because it’s a big pet peeve of mine when people complain about an issue without offering any potential solutions to it, I’ll give it a whack and suggest a few. I’m just spitballing, but here goes:
- What if a hard maximum was placed on the amount of posts or comments any user can make a day? Like 100? Or 500? Certainly no human being needs to or is likely to be able to make more comments a day than that, yes?
- What if there was a word minimum placed on how many words are necessary for a comment to earn SBD? Like say 5, or 10? Surely every real human being can muster a full sentence at least, yes?
- While we’re at it, is it unreasonable for posts themselves to have a word limit in order to earn SBD?
- How about bots, or something in the code itself, that can detect if the same account repeats the same words or sentences more than a small minimum amount of times per day and then flag or prevent those comments from being able to earn anything?
- How about making it worth something to flag? I realize this could be opening a whole can of worms on it’s own, but perhaps there could be some kind of system where certain people are voted on by the community to “police” posts and comments to be able to catch and stop the spammers? I mean, isn’t kind of the whole motto and basis of Steemit to be Proof of Brain?

Anyway, that’s all I’ve got for right now. I’m sure there’s lots of people smarter than me who can come up with much better solutions. One of my main points though is that all you Big Whales out there need to remember that you need to take care of and protect us minnows and small fry, or you’re not going to have your cash pool to swim in and enjoy for too much longer. Just like in the real world, if we don’t be more aware of, and ensure the health (and Happiness ;~) of the smallest but most populous members of our world, none of us are going to be able to continue to live in and enjoy it.

Wishing all of ya all the best!

Steem on!

@oleblueeye | April 25, 2018, 5:53 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

(Update to this comment)

I wrote this impassioned comment before I'd had a chance to read through the (many!) comments your post inspired, @timcliff. From what I've seen it seems like you've been convinced that your proposal is perhaps not a good idea. Which is great!

I'm going to leave my comment here anyway though as I spent a fair bit of time writing it and I feel (or hope!) that it may still provide some value to whoever may read it.

I also just wanted to add that it looks like you've read and replied to all of these comments, or at least most of 'em, which is pretty damn impressive on its own. It also shows a lot of class as well as respect towards those who take the time to reply to your posts. So, thanks for that @timcliff. Cheers dude!

@oleblueeye | April 25, 2018, 6:02 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Oh, and also, I have no idea as of yet if such a thing is frowned upon here or not, but I'm thinking I might re-tool this comment a bit and make it into a post of my own, including links to your original post here, @timcliff. If you or anyone else here feels this is not something I should do or is bad etiquette or what have you, please let me know. I'll wait a few days anyway before implementing it, just in case.

@timcliff | April 25, 2018, 3:23 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Go for it

@timcliff | April 25, 2018, 3:22 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Feedback acknowledged. Appreciate the suggestions :)

@drakernoise | April 25, 2018, 10:06 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

HI Tim, I don't like the idea at all, I'm sry.
I think it must be better altenatives that could be less "painfull".
I'm sorry I'm not much knoledge on the Steem code but maybe frontend platform could perfectly code tools for users to block other users or at least use a tool to wipe the content from the post before it gets stored in the blockchain.
Maybe my lack of knoledge about how things work drive me on the wrong direction.
Anyway I appreciate a lot the info and interest on solving some of the issues affecting our ecosystem. Many thanks for the info.

@improv | May 1, 2018, 3:31 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

OH MY GOD.

Not to, like, freak out, but I feel betrayed.

It already feels like the wealthiest members of this community receive a lot more $ relative to their effort than the users who put in the most thought and built the communities that keep people coming back do, but... that's just a fair unfairness, kind of built into the idea of Proof of Stake.

Fine. But this is the first I'm learning about a dust threshold.

I'm not particularly worried about spammers making $10/month with 10k dumb comments. They are obnoxious, but they get downvoted into invisibility, and there's some cost to creating those accounts, some time expenditures anyway. Blah. Not my point.

I think you'll still get spammers by raising the threshold. I'm not sure why you think the threshold would get rid of spam in the first place. Obviously there is a threshold, and there is spam.

What the threshold does, and what it will continue do, and what it will do even more severely if you raise the threshold, is it will limit distribution of the stake. I think one of the biggest problems facing Steemit is the wealth concentrated in the hands of a very narrow group of people. The content that is attractive to most people in the wider world has little to do with dev and crypto. And yet, those posts are the biggest payout... or whatever someone buys votes on.

What do I think you should do? I'm not an economist, but I think the problem is this concentration of wealth to some extent. I can see three possible solutions.

The first is what I think the wealthiest few would be most willing to do: Delegate their SP to trusted users who have different interests than they do. People whose posts and votes go to content that we can all agree aren't spam, but who aren't devs/crypto enthusiasts. And, to combat the spam problem, to a team of humans, devs and bots who will accurately identify spam and downvote it to oblivion. (Maybe a bot to identify potential spam that a human can make a real decision about... don't want to discourage newbies if their enthusiasm triggers a bot). Think of this as the charity solution?

The second, probably less welcome solution, is for these wealthiest to destroy their wealth by sending it to a null account, thereby resetting the percentage of awards pool. This would obviously not work unless folks really did it together. And an unhealthy ecosystem could still arise, with the same or different folks in power, but it's still something possible without changing too much. This is in individuals hands.

The third would be a fork that directly taxed and sent back to the rewards pool SP above a certain amount. Like, if you had more than 10,000SP, each week .1% of the SP in your account, and 10% of your earnings would get returned to the rewards pool to be redistributed. This is the tax solution. I like this best, though it may seem a bit less libertarian than other notions, because it is a perpetually self-correcting system. There's an incentive to use your SP to raise others, because it's more efficiently used that way than to raise yourself. After a certain level, there's less incentive to buy votes, and you can still sell your liquid funds to those who want more power more quickly.

A bit of the first and third would both serve to protect against spam, and would help the system stay universally appealing in the long run.

@timcliff | May 1, 2018, 9:53 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Interesting suggestions. #2 will most likely never happen. For #3, abusers would just split their stake into multiple accounts to avoid the tax.

@improv | May 1, 2018, 11:33 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Hmm. That's so. Are there any creative modifications to make to the idea that would make getting around it less possible? Hmmm.

@timcliff | May 2, 2018, 1:21 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

Probably not

@improv | May 3, 2018, 2:52 a.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

Succinct.

@tcpolymath | May 3, 2018, 7:34 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

There are a lot of comments here and I'm not going to try to read them all to see if someone has said this already, but I do have a suggestion that I think is interesting.

What if comment downvotes decreased a user's bandwidth allowance?

@timcliff | May 4, 2018, 1:30 a.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

It hasn't been suggested here (as far as I can remember), but it is something that has been brought up and discussed before. I'm open to the idea, but there are some concerns over it being used as a way to censor users. It would need to be given a lot of careful thought if we were to head down that road.

@rudyardcatling | May 8, 2018, 6:29 a.m. | Votes: 2 | [ VOTE ]

you would basically wreck initiatives like @steembasicincome where people in the hundreds maybe thousands have invested in by doing that, and a lot more, it would prevent small fry from getting anything and fat fish power would be reinforced, i would urge you to reconsider alienating thousands or i have no clue how many people from developing market countries are on

but maybe you don't want them ?

i dont know, it sound VERY elitist and unfriendly @timcliff

you can wreck me if you like, you sure have the power but stuff like that would wreck it for countless people anyway

please reconsider and try getting some pov from people who dont come into it with a ton of cash because some of you people are starting to sound like enlightened despots and content nazis

my 2 cents (cos that's all i have) ... actually my account is about $200 so in order for my vote to be payable i would need ten times that according to your proposal

thats about half of what i get in a year ...

fyi

[IMAGE: https://steemitimages.com/DQmQExaDrgdx66HwsmcTy49vafnSMZws497UKnFnoSBrJDg/whoareyoutodecide.png]

to think i actually have a vote on you and then have to read THIS ?

i know i probably come on hard because people are scared to talk back to someone who can basically checkmate them in 3 or less but take the message,not the words please ... what you propose basically removes all income for 99% of what's on my feed, and thats not 99% spam, far from, i have no idea how many initiatives like @steembasicincome are trying to lift off but i can do the math without numbers , they would have to give back all steem they received as investment, which they can't do because it's locked in sp, and all votes they diss out (who are already at minimal or below current treshold) would be worthless, everybody screwed, the number of members is somewhere in the faq or sheets, they keep open books, all distrobots starting out would be wrecked, and everyone who simply doesnt have money to start or promote would be wrecked on content that (and it barely ever does without promotion at start) doesnt meet the required treshold.

i do urge you, to consider viewpoints from several kinds of people before making proposals like that, Tim

think about it

don't want your vote, dont want your downvote, i want to do this, but with all i hear going on the best thing i could do ? is withdraw everything rightnow because at my monetary level i couldnt if any of that is instated

i understand how annoying it is to get 200 replies that go "nice post, pls upvote k thx" but there's a mute button, there's NOT a block button yet btw (that would help to ward off people who flag on topic because they think its inappropriate or "not steemit") two buttons that prevent different comms from getting in each others face and allow communities to stick to their own content within a larger universe, nothing more complex than that and also

you can have an auto-hide by default setting which people can imply on posts that are only relevant to those who search by primary tag

eg primary tag "wonderlandAB00xyz" gives the subfolder to a community, everyone who looks for it can see it, but autohidden posts don't show in general feed (the mains ones that is) , that can't be too hard to incorporate, im not a pro coder but all the mechanics are there, it just needs a checkbox

and that, my dear and good friend, is imo , a WAY better solution than opression, which will gain you alienated people and face it, if you run for mayor , that will get you enemies :)

for your kind consideration

[IMAGE: https://steemitimages.com/DQmPrnLWLHMBm59M5PxQ92tcCxkrAcHNpCc6gUWsoEZV5Lc/2.png]

@timcliff | May 8, 2018, 3:17 p.m. | Votes: 0 | [ VOTE ]

There have already been a lot of comments like this. I have responded to them, which you are welcome to read.

TLDR: message received :)

@rudyardcatling | May 8, 2018, 3:50 p.m. | Votes: 1 | [ VOTE ]

i have a nasty habit of shooting first and asking questions later ... not everyone can deal with that heheh ... me included sometimes,
i can imagine and i have read and seen by now (and someone told me too lol) , well glad you understand the initial shock, and glad to see a bit of reasoning put it into perspective, good luck

...(edit) i also have a nasty habit of posting and replying in several times because there's always something i forgot or i got interrupted, i am one force of chaos alas.

So .. i think, i personally still think the 'hidden communities' - voluntary hidden or selective viewable post should be a solution to take a whole load of stress off, not off the network ofcourse, but of the people who are bothered by the fact that it's on their screen and maybe already have muted 100 accounts or so and get tired of it (b/c otherwise i think the mute button is a great tool, and a block button would be even better, neither of it is censorship, its more like walling off your community and prevent invasion from people who wont like in the first place but keep coming back to tell you they don't and for some reason think what they want is what you should want) voluntary hiding making visible only by primary hashtag (pardon me if you lot use different words, im by no means a teamplaya or pro-coder) so it can be easily found by both people and bots for instance keeps it from sight. Out of sight out of mind, one step closer to world peace and diverse communities within one bigger universe. A bubble universe (the only kind that works if you ask me since we can not all get along ... thats clear by the year 2018 , isn't it?)
As for the network load, im afraid is that is an issue it is one you will have to face anyway sooner or later as the chain expands together with the number of accounts, i mean facebook has one billion plus, so go figure what if this thing here doesnt just take off, but takes over, it wont come down to spam because due to moores law being broken for years now (as good as) its inevitable if it cant be solved without reducing actual number of transactions (and volume i suppose) .. new compression methods ? i don't know

i'm not ray kurzweil, not satoshi nakamoto and if i code a bit i have to look up the syntax while googling lol

there we are (in case you havent read, i think this concludes ... if i type something its probably best to come back the next day to see what it's become)

thank you for your kind consideration

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